Yeah, right! I learned recently about the comparative availability - Canada vs. US - of a significant diagnostic tool, MRI units. This color-coded map gives 2022 data from WHO,
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/magnetic-resonance-imaging-mri-units-availability . One country in the world for which WHO has data has more MRI units
per capita than the US. It isn't Canada, and it isn't in EuroLand. The US had, in 2022, 40.1 MRI units per million people; Japan had 55.3 MRI units per million people.
In western EuroLand, only Portugal had fewer MRI units
per million people than Canada. In South America (WHO did not have data for Argentina or Brazil), Chile had more MRI units
per million people than Canada.
Canada had, in 2022, 10.3 MRI units
per million people, slightly more than
1/4 as many as the US.
Another significant diagnostic tool, CT scanners,
https://www.statista.com/statistics/266539/distribution-of-equipment-for-computer-tomography/ :
US has 42.63 per million people, 6th in the world behind Japan, Australia, Greece, Iceland, and Denmark. Canada has 14.6 per million people, 27th in the world.
The units per million people numbers don't tell the full story. Canada is the second largest country in the world, and its population density is far from homogeneous. There are a few provinces/territories that probably have more moose and/or salmon or trout than humans
(Nunavut might have more polar bears and seals than humans!). The availability of medical care in southern Quebec or Ontario is very different from that of pretty much any part of the Yukon or Northwest Territories, or Nunavut, and still significantly better than in the Maritime or Prairie Provinces.
And still, despite having the best availability in most of Canada, residents of southern Quebec and Ontario cross into the US for some diagnostic and surgical procedures because of long delays for receiving those procedures (delay = more pain, worse disease progression, and sometimes even death).