There are minimal shooting deaths in Canada if you are not involved in some sort of criminal activity.
Yes. The same can be said of the US as well. Remember, 330 million people means a lot more incidents. Most mass shootings are urban gang violence, but those don't make the news nor put most immigrants at risk.
The US healthcare system is better for the top 10% if you live in large urban centre.
It's better for the top 25%, and you don't have to live in a large urban center for it. You have a lot more flexibility in where you go and get care in the States, so where you live is less important.
When I had my shoulder injury, I was able to use my insurance to get reconstructive surgery from someone who was the surgeon for an NBA team. He did a very, very good job.
The statistics prove that someone in the US is more likely to die because of the US healthcare system.
The average person has 1 testicle. True is not necessarily useful. If you have cancer and are poor, you will probably get treatment in Canada, though (as a friend of mine found out), the delay in testing may end up killing you anyway. Preventable cancer, wait limit, took too long.
Meanwhile, it's a very good thing that I can travel to the states for medical care. It took 3 years after moving to Ontario to get an appointment to see an allergist. That appointment was for four years out, in 2020. It was cancelled due to COVID. It took 3 years to get a GP.
Just one example but mortality rates for pregnant women are much higher in the US versus all comparable countries.
Yes. Canada puts a higher priority on prenatal care, but those with employer-sponsored healthcare will generally get comparable results in the US.
The healthcare system isn't perfect but there is no data proving that a Canadian citizen is more likely to die versus a US citizen because of our healthcare system. I have a family member who had great insurance, a very well paying job and lived in Boston which is a medical hub. In 2 years no doctor could diagnose them and they were diagnosed within 6 months after returning to Canada. In general how good your healthcare outcomes are often related to your actual doctor.
Individuals are individuals, groups are groups. I can give examples like Canada only paying for a single bypass when they would do a quadruple bypass in the US (which would have had a better outcome health wise), or delays leading to missed cancer diagnoses in Canada. I can also show cases of people dying in the United States because they couldn't afford healthcare at all. I shutdown one company because of ObamaCare price hikes, and had to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars out of pocket to get my mother the healthcare she needed when she lost her US insurance.
Each system has it's benefits and downsides. The US is better if you can pay/have good insurance, or you need immediate care for something that's not life threatening. When I need a script in the US for my migraine medications, I just open up an app, schedule an appointment for the same day or next day, and fill my script. I did it last week in preparation for returning to Canada. It cost me $1,600 - something that would not happen in Canada.
Meanwhile, my generic prescriptions that I fill in the US are $3/mo, and I fill 6 months at a time. With 3 of them, and a cost of ~110cdn/drug/month, that saves me a lot of money. Plus, I don't have to wait 4 years to see a doctor.