I recently had to visit an emergency ward in India. My family member was seen within 15 minutes and I walked out of there with a total bill of 750Rs. All the reports were given to me within an hour as well.
I doubt I would get a similar service in a so-called first-world country. Of course, this is a scenario where everything went right and my family member turned out to be ok.
Yeah, yeah - I know. "If you don't like it, stay back." I am an Indian. I have now invested in this and I am not getting out until I get my money's worth.
I have seen similar in Canada too. In walk-in clinics and in Urgent and Primary Care Clinics. What is not happening in Canada is getting a family physician who maintains and cares for your family medical needs over a very long time. Coming to emergencies, it is well triaged in Canada. My mother fell down from stairs. We got her CT scan, X ray and Dr consult under 2-3 hours in Canada at our local hospital. It was a saturday to boot. I went in panic due minor fever for my 2 months old son once in night (weekend). They made us sit for 8 hours because vital etc all were normal.
Its chronic care that is getting disrupted in Canada due to Drs getting retired and very few family physicians available.
Chronic care in India is seldom done by government and is most left to individuals.
Now if you are unlucky to require emergency during a public health crisis -- think second wave in India kind of crisis; both Canada and India will not matter. None of the plans work then. Difference here is that public health tries its level best to avoid that situation.