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The caricature of 'socialized medicine' is used by corporate interests to
confuse Americans and maintain their bottom lines instead of patients'
health.
Universal health insurance is on the American policy agenda for the fifth
time since World War II. In the 1960s, the U.S. chose public coverage for
only the elderly and the very poor, while Canada opted for a universal
program for hospitals and physicians' services. As a policy analyst, I know
there are lessons to be learned from studying the effect of different
approaches in similar jurisdictions. But, as a Canadian with lots of
American friends and relatives, I am saddened that Americans seem incapable
of learning them.
Our countries are joined at the hip. We peacefully share a continent, a
British heritage of representative government and now ownership of GM. And,
until 50 years ago, we had similar health systems, healthcare costs and
vital statistics.
The U.S.' and Canada's different health insurance decisions make up the
world's largest health policy experiment. And the results?
On coverage, all Canadians have insurance for hospital and physician
services. There are no deductibles or co-pays. Most provinces also provide
coverage for programs for home care, long-term care, pharmaceuticals and
durable medical equipment, although there are co-pays.
On the U.S. side, 46 million people have no insurance, millions are
underinsured and healthcare bills bankrupt more than 1 million Americans
every year.
Lesson No. 1: A single-payer system would eliminate most U.S. coverage
problems.
On costs, Canada spends 10% of its economy on healthcare; the U.S. spends
16%. The extra 6% of GDP amounts to more than $800 billion per year. The
spending gap between the two nations is almost entirely because of higher
overhead. Canadians don't need thousands of actuaries to set premiums or
thousands of lawyers to deny care. Even the U.S. Medicare program has 80% to
90% lower administrative costs than private Medicare Advantage policies. And
providers and suppliers can't charge as much when they have to deal with a
single payer.
Lessons No. 2 and 3: Single-payer systems reduce duplicative administrative
costs and can negotiate lower prices.
Because most of the difference in spending is for non-patient care,
Canadians actually get more of most services. We see the doctor more often
and take more drugs. We even have more lung transplant surgery. We do get
less heart surgery, but not so much less that we are any more likely to die
of heart attacks. And we now live nearly three years longer, and our infant
mortality is 20% lower.
Lesson No. 4: Single-payer plans can deliver the goods because their funding
goes to services, not overhead.
The Canadian system does have its problems, and these also provide important
lessons. Notwithstanding a few well-publicized and misleading cases,
Canadians needing urgent care get immediate treatment. But we do wait too
long for much elective care, including appointments with family doctors and
specialists and selected surgical procedures. We also do a poor job managing
chronic disease.
However, according to the New York-based Commonwealth Fund, both the
American and the Canadian systems fare badly in these areas. In fact, an
April U.S. Government Accountability Office report noted that U.S. emergency
room wait times have increased, and patients who should be seen immediately
are now waiting an average of 28 minutes. The GAO has also raised concerns
about two- to four-month waiting times for mammograms.
On closer examination, most of these problems have little to do with public
insurance or even overall resources. Despite the delays, the GAO said there
is enough mammogram capacity.
These problems are largely caused by our shared politico-cultural barriers
to quality of care. In 19th century North America, doctors waged a campaign
against quacks and snake-oil salesmen and attained a legislative monopoly on
medical practice. In return, they promised to set and enforce standards of
practice. By and large, it didn't happen. And perverse incentives like
fee-for-service make things even worse.
Using techniques like those championed by the Boston-based Institute for
Healthcare Improvement, providers can eliminate most delays. In Hamilton,
Ontario, 17 psychiatrists have linked up with 100 family doctors and 80
social workers to offer some of the world's best access to mental health
services. And in Toronto, simple process improvements mean you can now get
your hip assessed in one week and get a new one, if you need it, within a
month.
Lesson No. 5: Canadian healthcare delivery problems have nothing to do with
our single-payer system and can be fixed by re-engineering for quality.
U.S. health policy would be miles ahead if policymakers could learn these
lessons. But they seem less interested in Canada's, or any other nation's,
experience than ever. Why?
American democracy runs on money. Pharmaceutical and insurance companies
have the fuel. Analysts see hundreds of billions of premiums wasted on
overhead that could fund care for the uninsured. But industry executives and
shareholders see bonuses and dividends.
Compounding the confusion is traditional American ignorance of what happens
north of the border, which makes it easy to mislead people. Boilerplate
anti-government rhetoric does the same. The U.S. media, legislators and even
presidents have claimed that our "socialized" system doesn't let us choose
our own doctors. In fact, Canadians have free choice of physicians. It's
Americans these days who are restricted to "in-plan" doctors.
Unfortunately, many Americans won't get to hear the straight goods because
vested interests are promoting a caricature of the Canadian experience.
Michael M. Rachlis is a physician, health policy analyst and author in
Toronto.
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