Thursday, May 3, 2007

USA Is Number 2 in Health Care

 
Scientific American, that paragon of science writing, has an article on health care. It reports the results of a study done by a bunch of Canadians. They compare the health care systems in the USA and Canada and discover that We're Number Two: Canada Has as Good or Better Health Care than the U.S..
According to Woolhandler, by looking at already ill patients, the researchers eliminated any Canadian lifestyle advantage and just examined the degree to which the two systems affected patient deaths. (Mortality was the one kind of data they could extract from a disparate pool of 38 papers examining everything from kidney failure to rheumatoid arthritis.)

Overall, the results favored Canadians, who were 5 percent less likely than Americans to die in the course of treatment. Some disorders, such as kidney failure, favored Canadians more strongly than Americans, whereas others, such as hip fracture, had slightly better outcomes in the U.S. than in Canada. Of the 38 studies the authors surveyed, which were winnowed down from a pool of thousands, 14 favored Canada, five the U.S., and 19 yielded mixed results.
These studies are never conclusive. There will always be people who quibble about this or that and just as you might expect there is the obligatory complaint about wait times in Canada.

The point isn't so much whether Canada is better—although it is—the point is that Americans have just got to stop pretending that they have the best health care system in the world. At the very least it's time to admit that it's "one of the best." One thing is very clear, the American system may not be the best in the world but it's sure the most expensive.
The study's authors highlight the fact that per capita spending on health care is 89 percent higher in the U.S. than in Canada. "One thing that people generally know is that the administration costs are much higher in the U.S.," Groome notes. Indeed, one study by Woolhandler published in The New England Journal of Medicine in 2003 found that 31 percent of spending on health care in the U.S. went to administrative costs, whereas Canada spent only 17 percent on the same functions.
I suspect there are many European countries with health care systems that are just as good as the one in America. I suspect that Japan, New Zealand, and Australia have good health care as well. I've never seen any data that shows that the quality of health care in America is better than everywhere else in the world. It seems to be one of those myths of American superiority that has no basis in fact. The myth prevents Americans from joining the rest of the civilized world and adopting socialized medicine.

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