Message Number: 499
From: Robert Felty <robfelty Æ umich.edu>
Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 13:14:10 -0400
Subject: seems like nationalized health care leads to healthier people
Here is an interesting article from Yes magazine comparing health  
care statistics of different countries. The U.S. ranks much lower  
than one might think, and Canada's stats have gotten much better  
since 1970, when they implemented nationalized health care.
http://www.yesmagazine.org/article.asp?ID 03

Text pasted below
__________________________________
Has Canada Got the Cure?
by Holly Dressel

	
Publicly funded health care has its problems, as any Canadian or  
Briton knows. But like democracy, it’s the best answer we’ve come  
up with so far.

US Canada Health CareShould the United States implement a more	
inclusive, publicly funded health care system? That's a big debate  
throughout the country. But even as it rages, most Americans are  
unaware that the United States is the only country in the developed  
world that doesn't already have a fundamentally public--that is, tax- 
supported--health care system.

That means that the United States has been the unwitting control  
subject in a 30-year, worldwide experiment comparing the merits of  
private versus public health care funding. For the people living in  
the United States, the results of this experiment with privately  
funded health care have been grim. The United States now has the most  
expensive health care system on earth and, despite remarkable  
technology, the general health of the U.S. population is lower than  
in most industrialized countries. Worse, Americans' mortality rates-- 
both general and infant--are shockingly high.

Different paths

Beginning in the 1930s, both the Americans and the Canadians tried to  
alleviate health care gaps by increasing use of employment-based  
insurance plans. Both countries encouraged nonprofit private  
insurance plans like Blue Cross, as well as for-profit insurance  
plans. The difference between the United States and Canada is that  
Americans are still doing this, ignoring decades of international  
statistics that show that this type of funding inevitably leads to  
poorer public health.

Meanwhile, according to author Terry Boychuk, the rest of the  
industrialized world, including many developing countries like	
Mexico, Korea, and India, viscerally understood that "private  
insurance would [never be able to] cover all necessary hospital  
procedures and services; and that even minimal protection [is] beyond  
the reach of the poor, the working poor, and those with the most  
serious health problems." 1 Today, over half the family bankruptcies  
filed every year in the United States are directly related to medical  
expenses, and a recent study shows that 75 percent of those are filed  
by people with health insurance.2

The United States spends far more per capita on health care than any  
comparable country. In fact, the gap is so enormous that a recent  
University of California, San Francisco, study estimates that the  
United States would save over $161 billion every year in paperwork  
alone if it switched to a singlepayer system like Canada’s.3 These  
billions of dollars are not abstract amounts deducted from government  
budgets; they come directly out of the pockets of people who are sick.

The year 2000 marked the beginning of a crucial period, when  
international trade rules, economic theory, and political action had  
begun to fully reflect the belief in the superiority of private, as  
opposed to public, management, especially in the United States. By  
that year the U.S. health care system had undergone what has been  
called "the health management organization revolution." U.S.  
government figures show that medical care costs have spiked since  
2000, with total spending on prescriptions nearly doubling. 4

Cutting costs, cutting care There are two criteria used to judge a  
country’s health care system: the overall success of creating and  
sustaining health in the population, and the ability to control costs  
while doing so. One recent study published in the Canadian Medical  
Association Journal compares mortality rates in private forprofit and  
nonprofit hospitals in the United States. Research on 38 million  
adult patients in 26,000 U.S. hospitals revealed that death rates in  
for-profit hospitals are signifi cantly higher than in nonprofit  
hospitals: for-profit patients have a 2 percent higher chance of  
dying in the hospital or within 30 days of discharge. The increased  
death rates were clearly linked to "the corners that for-profit  
hospitals must cut in order to achieve a profit margin for investors,  
as well as to pay high salaries for administrators."5

“To ease cost pressures, administrators tend to hire less highly  
skilled personnel, including doctors, nurses, and pharmacists…,”  
wrote P. J. Devereaux, a cardiologist at McMaster University and the  
lead researcher. “The U.S. statistics clearly show that when the  
need for profits drives hospital decisionmaking, more patients die.”

The value of care for all

Historically, one of the cruelest aspects of unequal income  
distribution is that poor people not only experience material want  
all their lives, they also suffer more illness and die younger. But  
in Canada there is no association between income inequality and  
mortality rates—none whatsoever.

In a massive study undertaken by Statistics Canada in the early  
1990s, income and mortality census data were analyzed from all	
Canadian provinces and all U.S. states, as well as 53 Canadian and  
282 American metropolitan areas.6 The study concluded that “the  
relationship between income inequality and mortality is not  
universal, but instead depends on social and political	
characteristics specific to place.” In other words, government  
health policies have an effect.

“Income inequality is strongly associated with mortality in the  
United States and in North America as a whole,” the study found,  
“but there is no relation within Canada at either the province or  
metropolitan area level -- between income inequality and mortality.”

The same study revealed that among the poorest people in the United  
States, even a one percent increase inincome resulted in a mortality  
decline of nearly 22 out of 100,000.

What makes this study so interesting is that Canada used to have  
statistics that mirrored those in the United States. In 1970, U.S.  
and Canadian mortality rates calculated along income lines were  
virtually identical. But 1970 also marked the introduction of  
Medicare in Canada -- universal, singlepayer coverage. The simple  
explanation for how Canadians have all become equally healthy,	
regardless of income, most likely lies in the fact that they have a  
publicly funded, single-payer health system and the control group,  
the United States, does not.

Infant mortality

Infant mortality rates, which refl ect the health of the mother and  
her access to prenatal and postnatal care, are considered one of the  
most reliable measures of the general health of a population. Today,  
U.S. government statistics rank Canada's infant mortality rate of 4.7  
per thousand 23rd out of 225 countries, in the company of the  
Netherlands, Luxembourg, Australia, and Denmark. The U.S. is 43rd--in  
the company of Croatia and Lithuania, below Taiwan and Cuba.

All the countries surrounding Canada or above it in the rankings have  
tax-supported health care systems. The countries surrounding the  
United States and below have mixed systems or are, in general,	
extremely poor in comparison to the United States and the other G8  
industrial powerhouses.

There are no major industrialized countries near the United States in  
the rankings. The closest is Italy, at 5.83 infants dying per  
thousand, but it is still ranked five places higher.7

In the United States, infant mortality rates are 7.1 per 1,000, the  
highest in the industrialized world -- much higher than some of the  
poorer states in India, for example, which have public health systems  
in place, at least for mothers and infants. Among the inner-city poor  
in the United States, more than 8 percent of mothers receive no  
prenatal care at all before giving birth.

Overall U.S. mortality

We would have expected to see steady decreases in deaths per thousand  
in the mid-twentieth century, because so many new drugs and  
procedures were becoming available. But neither the Canadian nor the  
American mortality rate declined much; in fact, Canada’s leveled off	
for an entire decade, throughout the 1960s. This was a period in  
which private care was increasing in Canadian hospitals, and the  
steady mortality rates reflect the fact that most people simply  
couldn't afford the new therapies that were being offered. However,  
beginning in 1971, the same year that Canada's Medicare was fully  
applied, official statistics show that death rates suddenly  
plummeted, maintaining a steep decline to their present rate.

In the United States, during the same period, overall mortality rates  
also dropped, reflecting medical advances. But they did not drop  
nearly so precipitously as those in Canada after 1971. But given that  
the United States is the richest country on earth, today's overall  
mortality rates are shockingly high, at 8.4 per thousand, compared to  
Canada's 6.5.

Rich and poor

It has become increasingly apparent, as data accumulate, that the  
overall improvement in health in a society with tax-supported health  
care translates to better health even for the rich, the group assumed  
to be the main beneficiaries of the American-style private system. If  
we look just at the 5.7 deaths per thousand among presumably richer,  
white babies in the United States, Canada still does better at 4.7,  
even though the Canadian figure includes all ethnic groups and all  
income levels. Perhaps a one-per-thousand difference doesn’t sound  
like much. But when measuring mortality, it’s huge. If the U.S.  
infant mortality rate were the same as Canada’s, almost 15,000 more  
babies would survive in the United States every year.

If we consider the statistics for the poor, which in the United  
States have been classified by race, we find that in 2001, infants  
born of black mothers were dying at a rate of 14.2 per thousand.  
That’s a Third World figure, comparable to Russia’s.8

But now that the United States has begun to do studies based on  
income levels instead of race, these "cultural" and genetic  
explanations are turning out to be baseless. Infant mortality is  
highest among the poor, regardless of race.

Vive la différence! Genetically, Canadians and Americans are quite  
similar. Our health habits, too, are very much alike -- people in  
both countries eat too much and exercise too little. And, like the  
United States, there is plenty of inequality in Canada, too. In terms  
of health care, that inequality falls primarily on Canadians in  
isolated communities, particularly Native groups, who have poorer  
access to medical care and are exposed to greater environmental  
contamination. The only major difference between the two countries  
that could account for the remarkable disparity in their infant and  
adult mortality rates, as well as the amount they spend on health  
care, is how they manage their health care systems.

The facts are clear: Before 1971, when both countries had similar,  
largely privately funded health care systems, overall survival and  
mortality rates were almost identical. The divergence appeared with  
the introduction of the single-payer health system in Canada.

The solid statistics amassed since the 1970s point to only one	
conclusion: like it or not, believe it makes sense or not, publicly  
funded, universally available health care is simply the most powerful  
contributing factor to the overall health of the people who live in  
any country. And in the United States, we have got the bodies to  
prove it.

Holly Dressel was born south of Chicago and lives in Montreal,	
Quebec. She is a writer/researcher and the best-selling co-author,  
with David Suzuki, of Good News for a Change and other works.

This article was adapted from Holly Dressel’s book God Save the  
Queen—God Save Us All: An Examination of Canadian Hospital Care via  
the Life and Death of Montreal’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital, to be  
published in 2007 by McGill/Queen’s Press.

1Terry Boychuk. The Making and Meaning of Hospital Policy in the  
United States and Canada. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor: 1999.
2David U. Himmelstein, et al. Health Affairs, Jan.–June 2005, http:// 
content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/reprint/hlthaff.w5.63v1
3Professor James Kahn, UCSF, quoted in Harper’s Magazine,  
“Harper’s List,” Feb. 2006.
4National Health Expenditure Data, www.cms.hhs.gov/ 
NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/tables.pdf.
5Devereaux, Dr. P.J., et al. “A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis  
of Studies Comparing Mortality between Private For-Profit and Private  
Not-For-Profit Hospitals,” Canadian Medical Association Journal,  
May, 2002.
6Nancy A. Ross et al. “Relation between income inequality and  
mortality in Canada and in the United States: cross sectional  
assessment using census data and vital statistics,” Statistics  
Canada, reprinted in Health Geography, GEOG-303, ed. Nancy Ross,  
McGill University, 2005, pp. 109-117.
7CIA World Fact Book. www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/rankorder/ 
2091rank.html
8See, among many studies blaming race, Child Health USA 2003, Health  
Status – Infants; HRSA, with graphs such as “Breastfeeding Rates  
by Race/Ethnicity, 2001”; “Very Low Birth Weight Among Infants, by	
Race/Ethnicity 1985-2001”; http://www.mchb.hrsa.gov/chusa03.
-- 
Robert Felty http://www-personal.umich.edu/~robfelty

I took a course in speed reading and was able to read War and Peace in
twenty minutes.  It's about Russia.
		 -- Woody Allen