ABSTRACT

Past chapters have made clear the differences in Americans’ and Canadians’ attitudes about their own health care system. Our work thus far has been able to build on a small but valuable literature on health care attitudes in the United States and Canada. We now shift gears, however, and focus on a subject that has rarely, if ever, found its way into analysis of public attitudes on health care. We focus here not on Americans’ and Canadians’ attitudes about their own health care system but on their attitudes about each other’s health care system.