Can Canada’s health system survive when we go to war?

On the first night of a war games exercise meant to help Canada prepare for a possible global conflict, Russia sent drones into Poland, and NATO forces opened fire for the first time since the beginning of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Not in the game: in real life. On the elevator up to the introductory dinner at the Royal Canadian Military Institute for the sequel to the war game from last year involving Canada’s health-care system, one doctor said, “It’s not so hypothetical anymore, is it?”

One year earlier a group of health-care leaders, Canadian Armed Forces officials, and provincial government representatives completed an almost unprecedented Ontario-focused war games exercise based on a wider war in Europe involving Canadian troops. As trauma expert, NATO blood panel leader, and military surgeon Dr. Andrew Beckett put it, “the last time we did something like this was probably 1939.” To the vast majority of Canadians, and even to those in the room at the time, the idea of a society-wide war was hard to even imagine.

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