Statistics are shown for this demographic
Province/Territory
Response rates from 1.3m Canada voters.
84% Yes |
16% No |
73% Yes |
13% No |
4% Yes, preventative dental care is an important aspect of long term health |
2% No, emergency care is already included, preventative care should be an individual's responsibility. |
4% Yes, but only for low income citizens |
1% No, we cannot afford to add this at the moment |
3% Yes, but only for children |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 1.3m Canada voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 1.3m Canada voters.
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Unique answers from Canada voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@8QQDC3J4yrs4Y
Yes but dentists fees should be compared to those around the world. You could have a government dentist whos prices are comparable with other countries, and a privatized option, the private dentist would then have to compete with the government dentist for prices and quality of work.
@9VR8FZ83mos3MO
Yes, but only for Canadian Citizens. Preventative dental care is an important aspect of long term health
@9VJ4LGD3mos3MO
Yes, but the government should not be able to see all the medical and dental records of patients because an office is opting in to this program.
@9W9YG5K2mos2MO
Healthcare including dental care should be provincial, not federal, let the voters in each province decide
@9F5KMPV1yr1Y
Bad teeth can kill you. Teeth are important to your health. Dental care should be covered in universal health care.
@9GZYG4J1yr1Y
No, instead privatize healthcare and provide healthcare vouchers and healthcare tax credits for low income individual/families.
@9F7WL2Z1yr1Y
for children and people of low income
@8SSYZNN4yrs4Y
yes for all low come Canadians, all children under the age of 18 and those with no benefits to cover them
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