couchcommander said:
The key point here was for the same procedure. That means if take a guy and do the exact same thing to him, once in a private hospital, once in a public, the cost in the private one will be significantly higher as a result of the administrative and mangerial costs associated with a for profit delivery system.
So, you are pointing out that price controls keep an artificial low cost to procedures - no news here. Are you implying that low-balling our doctors and nurses, which is where the "lower price for the same procedure" come from (no profit and government set wages) is a good way to go about things? I'm sure driving competent and highly skilled health care professionals to greener pastures is indicative of a strong system of health care delivery - we lost about 10,000 in the 1990's alone.
http://www.cato.org/dailys/07-24-04.html
As Brad Sallows said earlier:
"I would be inclined to take them seriously if proponents of our system could explain in detail why US health care expenditures are greater than Canadian expenditures, particularly in light of the facts that health care professionals here complain of underpay and overwork. Do you suppose if we had more health care providers and paid them at least whatever fair wage a free market would set, that we might pay more per capita for health care?"
As well, I can't for the life of me figure out where you get "increased managerial and administrative costs" in a system of private delivery. A private system will have no government administrative unit (only regulatory ones) and thus no "managerial and administrative costs" - the companies rather then the taxpayer are responsible for this. Be careful not to confuse a system of publically funded universal coverage with publically delivered health services.
As well, we WERE falling behind in technological fields, that was before the first 5 billion investment in diagnostic technologies back in the late nineties, then the health care deal under Chretien, and then this last deal under Martin. Services are improving. The fact that the University medical centre here in Edmonton has 4 new buildings going up is a testament to this (a heart centre, two research buildings, and yes, a diagnostic centre).
It's not so much a matter of what technology we have, as Canada is, by being a G8 country, liable to be at the cutting edge of technology, but rather an issue of the availability of this technology. As I said before, we have an MRI per capita level on par with Latin American countries. As the article above stated, waiting lists exist for MRI, CT and ultrasound exist in Canada and have been getting longer every year as these high-technology instruments become recognized as essential for adequate treatment with more and more health problems.
A privately delivered system is better equipped to deal with rising health care costs that are associated with technology:
"Also, policy efforts should incorporate both the benefits and costs of new technologies. One typical argument is that a desire for high-technology care, coupled with the relatively low prices for medical care faced by well-insured consumers, tends to lead to the consumption of services whose value is much lower than the cost to society. However, effective price competition in health care markets, in which those receiving the benefits of services also have an appreciation for their cost, has the potential to reduce excess, inefficient use. For example, health plan policies that help consumers better identify the costs associated with their consumption choices, particularly for nonacute treatment decisions, may be effective policies to consider. In turn, these could affect the incentives associated with the purchase of new equipment."
http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/full/hlthaff.w3.537v1/DC2
If perverse incentives exist due to the structure of our system, how are we ever going to ensure that we can encourage high-technology growth in the health sector. Raise the taxes, you say?
These are the "basic indicators" that the WHO uses to measure the health care system. Further, I would add, though I am not 100% sure, so don't quote me on this, that the homicide rate in the US isn't high enough to really affect their average life span. Further, homicide doesn't usually factor into infant mortality rate, which IS indeed a very good measure of the level of care availible to a person.
You missed the point - I was pointing out that America possesses a far different problem with regards to large, inner city populations that face a gamut of problems from overcrowding, low education, rampant gang violence and drug abuse, etc, etc. I fail to see how these issues, which are serious and weigh in on QOL issues (infant mortality rate, life expectency), are factored around the Health Care system. I am willing to bet that, like the statistics on violence, once you remove outliers like poor inner-city conditions which simply do not exist on the same scale in Canada, the average statistics on QOL issues between Canadians and Americans isn't much different.
Again, as Brad Sallows pointed out (and you failed to address):
"Do you suppose the quantity and health of immigrants, particularly illegal ones with poor health backgrounds, has any impact on the cost of US health care, infant mortality, and life expectancy? I would sure like to see someone filter out that particular background "noise" from any comparison to Canada."
All canadians are guaranteed a basic level of health care coverage free of charge. No canadian is without basic medical coverage (even you for those six months, had something happened to you, you would have been treated, no charge). And furthermore, I might add that this number, 50 million, represents Americans with no coverage, that INCLUDES medicaid. They have nothing, no government coverage, nadda. So no, it's not a myth but a terrible reality.
It is a myth in that is presented as a large population of people (I remember it being 40 million - when did it go up?) that are constantly without health care coverage and are in need of health care services. As I said, this isn't true, and most of these people move through the "uninsured" category and get insured in a short period of time, not really facing any problems what so ever. Quit trying to depict the stats as some formless mob of people crying out for doctors - this is a highly fluid population of people who face a lack of insurance (usually for a short period of time) for a variety of reasons.
That being said, one cannot pick and choose when they need access to health care, which is why I don't dispute a publically funded system of universal coverage. But don't confuse this with also keeping a system of public delivery of health care - just because the province of BC provides auto insurance to all motorists doesn't mean that they should or are capable of owning and managing every auto body shop.
As I've argued many times before, Dr David Gratzer addresses this issue along with many others you've presented in his book
Code Blue
http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/item.asp?Catalog=books&Section=books&Lang=en&Item=978155022393&N=35&zxac=1
Look at the book - it is meticulously researched and referenced - and decide if you are going to stick to your guns....
The point was that a privately managed system will be MUCH more expensive and less efficient.
Bullocks.
"A quick look back over the last 11 years provides additional perspective. Between 1993 and 2004, inflation adjusted health care spending per person increased by 27 percent, while waiting lists nationally grew by an incredible 92 percent. Statistical analyses of this bizarre relationship have confirmed that past increases in provincial spending, unless specifically targeted to physicians or pharmaceuticals, were indeed correlated with increases in waiting times, which is not all that surprising considering that provinces that spent more on health care were also found to be providing fewer major surgeries for patients.
If we ended up with longer wait times and a reduction of services when we spent more in the past, why should Canadians expect any different this time around?
Dr. Max Gammon, after studying health expenditures and health services in the British National Health Service, formulated what he called â Å“the theory of bureaucratic displacement,â ? now known as Gammon's Law. The law states that an increase in expenditures in a bureaucratic system will be matched by a fall in production. As Dr. Gammon put it, â Å“Such systems will act rather like 'black holes', in the economic universe, simultaneously sucking in resources, and shrinking in terms of 'emitted production'.â ?
Considering that the Canadian health care program was originally modeled on the now failing British NHS, it should not come as a surprise to anyone that we are subject to the same results from increases in health expenditures. That giant sucking sound you hear, and the related lightness you'll soon feel in your wallet, is Gammon's Law at work."
http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/shared/readmore1.asp?sNav=ed&id=332
Horrible predictions of health care taking up all of our money I think are a little unfounded. The point is that amazingly, right now, we actually do have enough money, and it's not going to break the bank.
Again, look at the Gratzer book. The statistics are there to back the claims. I don't have access to the book right now, or I would put them up here.
I might add, the costs associated with having an elderly population willl be around whether or not there is a private or public system, the fact is that these costs will just be higher in a private system.
Just as the CPP will ultimately fall short of providing adequate incomes to people due to demographics, so will the publically delivered health care system. The goal is, along with Pension reform, to ensure a system that structures the a persons income into private accounts (that may be also fed from public funds) rather then lumping their contributions into "General Revenue" (ie: Adscam, HRDC, pork-barrelling). If you take this money (public, private, or a mix) out of Ottawa's hands and put it into the hands of individuals, you can get around the fact that in centralized command systems, providers support the elderly rather then "storing away" for their own senior years - this is something that will become a bigger factor in the future and that our system will be harder and harder pressed to deal with if it relies solely on the public purse.
And I agree with a cost for health services (as I mentioned before, charge somebody like 10 bucks to go to the doctor... just enough so that it won't actually stop someone who is really sick, but so that it just not FREE). I just don't think that HSA are the best way to do it as I can already forsee skyrocketing inefficiences.
If you think 10 bucks is going to eliminate the perverse incentives of our health care system and eliminate rationing of a limited and publically derived pool of resources, I think you're dreaming.
As for skyrocketing inefficiencies, all the research I've looked at (Gratzer, Fraser Institute, "Gammon's Law", etc) seems to point to the opposite direction. Are you going to give me anything to substantiate your claims that Health or Medical service accounts or private delivery of health services will introduce radical inefficieny into our system? Looking at the creaking edifice of our 1960's derived system as it stands right now, I'm doubting we could do worse, Comrade.
http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/shared/readmore.asp?sNav=pb&id=658
http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/shared/readmore.asp?sNav=pb&id=222
http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/shared/readmore1.asp?sNav=ed&id=330
Say what you want and dismiss the Fraser Institute on ideological grounds, but they do put up the numbers in terms of objective quantitative statistics and if you are going to prove to me that they way things are going now are ideal, you should start with these concepts and prove them wrong.
The American system is big market economy example that acts as a counterpoint to our own system, and to which we are often compared by BOTH sides. Of course if we want we can start comparing to systems in France and Britain, which are mixed system, both have their highlights, and their horrible failures (notably the national health service in Britain).
One tends to come to the conclusion that private delivery of health care results in better health care for those people who are able to pay for it, and unfortunately does it rather inefficiently. It does little to affect the plight of your low to middle income average joe.
Alot of rhetoric, and not much in validation.
Instead of arguing this, I will fall back to Brad Sallows' (usual) excellent analysis earlier in this thread:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/28296.15.html
" Generally in medicine it is best to intervene at the earliest opportunity. A system with significant wait times is not much better than none at all. If you miss a window of a few weeks during which your cancer might have been detected in time for treatment, it isn't going to matter that it costs you nothing to slowly waste away in a hospital bed with tubes leading in and out of you. I frankly do not care if someone can buy Tier 1 Rolls-Royce health care if my Tier 2 publicly-insured health care is timely and competent, and the key to that is to have enough providers and facilities....
If health care workers are dissatisfied with working conditions and remuneration, it strikes me the only way to establish proper expectations is by free market mechanisms. I fully expect we will discover that health care costs "more". The point of health care delivery is to have enough capacity to meet reasonable demand. Since we are dealing with what is pretty much a personalized service and not an infrastructure megaproject, I think it safe to assume this is one area in which the usual free market mechanisms can meet demand. There will be reasons for government to participate in that market - for example, to meet the needs of small or isolated communities - but I believe a government near-monopoly is harmful.
There is nothing rigorous about all of the above; but, in short, I believe the reason the Canadian and US systems are perceived by some as dissatisfactory is that the optimum path probably lies somewhere in the general direction of the public insurance/private delivery vector."
Do you, you seem to be argueing here that a MSA system where people are responsible for management of their own health care expenditure (combined with "blowout" coverage for serious problems) is something that will be fraught with "high costs and inefficiency". That's odd, as I've never heard this claim lobbed at private markets by the command-economy crowd.
You've yet to address the fact that perverse incentives at all levels of the health care system, which stem from a faulty doctor/patient relationship (which is based upon product/cost), are inherent in command economies.