By Sara Robinson
TomPaine.com
February 5, 2008
2008 is shaping up to be the election year that we finally get to
have the Great American Healthcare Debate again. Harry and Louise are
back with a vengeance. Conservatives are rumbling around the talk show
circuit bellowing about the socialist threat to the (literal) American
body politic. And, as usual, Canada is once again getting dragged into
the fracas, shoved around by both sides as either an exemplar or a
warning — and, along the way, getting coated with the obfuscating dust
of so many willful misconceptions that the actual facts about How Canada
Does It are completely lost in the melee.
I’m both a health-care-card-carrying Canadian resident and an
uninsured American citizen who regularly sees doctors on both sides of
the border. As such, I’m in a unique position to address the pros and
cons of both systems first-hand. If we’re going to have this
conversation, it would be great if we could start out (for once) with
actual facts, instead of ideological posturing, wishful thinking,
hearsay, and random guessing about how things get done up here.
To that end, here’s the first of a two-part series aimed at busting
the common myths Americans routinely tell each other about Canadian
health care. When the right-wing hysterics drag out these hoary old
bogeymen, this time, we need to be armed and ready to blast them into
straw. Because, mostly, straw is all they’re made of.
1. Canada’s health care system is “socialized medicine.”
False. In socialized medical systems, the doctors work directly for the
state. In Canada (and many other countries with universal care), doctors
run their own private practices, just like they do in the US. The
only difference is that every doctor deals with one insurer, instead of
150. And that insurer is the provincial government, which is
accountable to the legislature and the voters if the quality of coverage
is allowed to slide.
The proper term for this is “single-payer insurance.” In talking to Americans about it, the better phrase is “Medicare for all.”
2. Doctors are hurt financially by single-payer health care.
True and False. Doctors in Canada do make less than their US counterparts. But they also have lower overhead, and usually much better working conditions. A few reasons for this:
First, as noted, they don’t have to charge higher fees to cover the
salary of a full-time staffer to deal with over a hundred different
insurers, all of whom are bent on denying care whenever possible. In
fact, most Canadian doctors get by quite nicely with just one assistant,
who cheerfully handles the phones, mail, scheduling, patient reception,
stocking, filing, and billing all by herself in the course of a
standard workday.
Second, they don’t have to spend several hours every day on the phone
cajoling insurance company bean counters into doing the right thing by
their patients. My doctor in California worked a 70-hour week: 35 hours
seeing patients, and another 35 hours on the phone arguing with
insurance companies. My Canadian doctor, on the other hand, works a
35-hour week, period. She files her invoices online, and the vast
majority are simply paid — quietly, quickly, and without hassle. There
is no runaround. There are no fights. Appointments aren’t interrupted by
vexing phone calls. Care is seldom denied (because everybody knows the
rules). She gets her checks on time, sees her patients on schedule,
takes Thursdays off, and gets home in time for dinner.
One unsurprising side effect of all this is that the doctors I see
here are, to a person, more focused, more relaxed, more generous with
their time, more up-to-date in their specialties, and overall much less
distracted from the real work of doctoring. You don’t realize how much
stress the American doctor-insurer fights put on the day-to-day quality
of care until you see doctors who don’t operate under that stress,
because they never have to fight those battles at all. Amazingly: they
seem to enjoy their jobs.
Third: The average American medical student graduates $140,000 in hock. The average Canadian doctor’s debt is roughly half that.
Finally, Canadian doctors pay lower malpractice insurance fees. When
paying for health care constitutes a one of a family’s major expenses,
expectations tend to run very high. A doctor’s mistake not only damages
the body; it may very well throw a middle-class family permanently into
the ranks of the working poor, and render the victim uninsurable for
life. With so much at stake, it’s no wonder people are quick to rush to
court for redress.
Canadians are far less likely to sue in the first place, since
they’re not having to absorb devastating financial losses in addition to
any physical losses when something goes awry. The cost of the damaging
treatment will be covered. So will the cost of fixing it. And, no matter
what happens, the victim will remain insured for life. When lawsuits do
occur, the awards don’t have to include coverage for future medical
costs, which reduces the insurance company’s liability.
3. Wait times in Canada are horrendous.
True and False again — it depends on which province you live in, and
what’s wrong with you. Canada’s health care system runs on federal
guidelines that ensure uniform standards of care, but each territory and
province administers its own program. Some provinces don’t plan their
facilities well enough; in those, you can have waits. Some do better. As
a general rule, the farther north you live, the harder it is to get to
care, simply because the doctors and hospitals are concentrated in the
south. But that’s just as true in any rural county in the U.S.
You can hear the bitching about it no matter where you live, though.
The percentage of Canadians who’d consider giving up their beloved
system consistently languishes in the single digits. A few years ago, a TV
show asked Canadians to name the Greatest Canadian in history; and in a
broad national consensus, they gave the honor to Tommy Douglas, the
Saskatchewan premier who is considered the father of the country’s
health care system. (And no, it had nothing to do with the fact that he
was also Kiefer Sutherland’s grandfather.). In spite of that, though,
grousing about health care is still unofficially Canada’s third national
sport after curling and hockey.
And for the country’s newspapers, it’s a prime watchdogging
opportunity. Any little thing goes sideways at the local hospital, and
it’s on the front pages the next day. Those kinds of stories sell
papers, because everyone is invested in that system and has a personal
stake in how well it functions. The American system might benefit from
this kind of constant scrutiny, because it’s certainly one of the things
that keeps the quality high. But it also makes people think it’s far
worse than it is.
Critics should be reminded that the American system is not exactly
instant-on, either. When I lived in California, I had excellent
insurance, and got my care through one of the best university-based
systems in the nation. Yet I routinely had to wait anywhere from six to
twelve weeks to get in to see a specialist. Non-emergency surgical waits
could be anywhere from four weeks to four months. After two years in
the BC system, I’m finding the experience to be pretty much comparable, and often better. The notable exception is MRIs,
which were easy in California, but can take many months to get here.
(It’s the number one thing people go over the border for.) Other than
that, urban Canadians get care about as fast as urban Americans do.
4. You have to wait forever to get a family doctor.
False for the vast majority of Canadians, but True for a few. Again, it
all depends on where you live. I live in suburban Vancouver, and there
are any number of first-rate GPs in my neighborhood who are taking new
patients. If you don’t have a working relationship with one, but need to
see a doctor now, there are 24-hour urgent care clinics in most
neighborhoods that will usually get you in and out on the minor stuff in
under an hour.
It is, absolutely, harder to get to a doctor if you live out in a
small town, or up in the territories. But that’s just as true in the U.S. —
and in America, the government won’t cover the airfare for rural folk
to come down to the city for needed treatment, which all the provincial
plans do.
5. You don’t get to choose your own doctor.
Scurrilously False. Somebody, somewhere, is getting paid a lot of money
to make this kind of stuff up. The cons love to scare the kids with
stories about the government picking your doctor for you, and you don’t
get a choice. Be afraid! Be very afraid!
For the record: Canadians pick their own doctors, just like Americans
do. And not only that: since it all pays the same, poor Canadians have
exactly the same access to the country’s top specialists that rich ones
do.
6. Canada’s care plan only covers the basics. You’re still on
your own for any extras, including prescription drugs. And you still
have to pay for it.
True — but not as big an issue as you might think. The province does
charge a small monthly premium (ours is $108/month for a family of four)
for the basic coverage. However, most people never even have to write
that check: almost all employers pick up the tab for their employees’
premiums as part of the standard benefits package; and the province
covers it for people on public assistance or disability.
“The basics” covered by this plan include 100% of all doctor’s fees,
ambulance fares, tests, and everything that happens in a hospital — in
other words, the really big-ticket items that routinely drive American
families into bankruptcy. In BC, it doesn’t
include “extras” like medical equipment, prescriptions, physical therapy
or chiropractic care, dental, vision, and so on; and if you want a
private or semi-private room with TV and
phone, that costs extra (about what you’d pay for a room in a middling
hotel). That other stuff does add up; but it’s far easier to afford if
you’re not having to cover the big expenses, too. Furthermore: you can
deduct any out-of-pocket health expenses you do have to pay off your
income taxes. And, as every American knows by now, drugs aren’t nearly
as expensive here, either.
Filling the gap between the basics and the extras is the job of the
country’s remaining private health insurers. Since they’re off the hook
for the ruinously expensive big-ticket items that can put their own
profits at risk, the insurance companies make a tidy business out of
offering inexpensive policies that cover all those smaller, more
predictable expenses. Top-quality add-on policies typically run in the
ballpark of $75 per person in a family per month — about $300 for a
family of four — if you’re stuck buying an individual plan. Group plans
are cheap enough that even small employers can afford to offer them as a
routine benefit. An average working Canadian with employer-paid basic
care and supplemental insurance gets free coverage equal to the best
policies now only offered at a few of America’s largest corporations.
And that employer is probably only paying a couple hundred dollars a
month to provide that benefit.
7. Canadian drugs are not the same.
More preposterious bogosity. They are exactly the same drugs, made by
the same pharmaceutical companies, often in the same factories. The
Canadian drug distribution system, however, has much tighter oversight;
and pharmacies and pharmacists are more closely regulated. If there is a
difference in Canadian drugs at all, they’re actually likely to be
safer.
Also: pharmacists here dispense what the doctors tell them to
dispense, the first time, without moralizing. I know. It’s amazing.
8. Publicly-funded programs will inevitably lead to rationed health care, particularly for the elderly.
False. And bogglingly so. The papers would have a field day if there was the barest hint that this might be true.
One of the things that constantly amazes me here is how
well-cared-for the elderly and disabled you see on the streets here are.
No, these people are not being thrown out on the curb. In fact, they
live longer, healthier, and more productive lives because they’re
getting a constant level of care that ensures small things get treated
before they become big problems.
The health care system also makes it easier on their caregiving adult
children, who have more time to look in on Mom and take her on outings
because they aren’t working 60-hour weeks trying to hold onto a job that
gives them insurance.
9. People won’t be responsible for their own health if they’re not being forced to pay for the consequences.
False. The philosophical basis of America’s privatized health care
system might best be characterized as medical Calvinism. It’s
fascinating to watch well-educated secularists who recoil at the
Protestant obsession with personal virtue, prosperity as a cardinal sign
of election by God, and total responsibility for one’s own salvation
turn into fire-eyed, moralizing True Believers when it comes to the
subject of Taking Responsibility For One’s Own Health.
They’ll insist that health, like salvation, is entirely in our own
hands. If you just have the character and self-discipline to stick to an
abstemious regime of careful diet, clean living, and frequent sweat
offerings to the Great Treadmill God, you’ll never get sick. (Like all
good theologies, there’s even an unspoken promise of immortality: f you
do it really really right, they imply, you might even live forever.) The
virtuous Elect can be discerned by their svelte figures and low
cholesterol numbers. From here, it’s a short leap to the conviction that
those who suffer from chronic conditions are victims of their own
weaknesses, and simply getting what they deserve. Part of their
punishment is being forced to pay for the expensive, heavily marketed
pharmaceuticals needed to alleviate these avoidable illnesses. They
can’t complain. It was their own damned fault; and it’s not our
responsibility to pay for their sins. In fact, it’s recently been
suggested that they be shunned, lest they lead the virtuous into sin.
Of course, this is bad theology whether you’re applying it to the
state of one’s soul or one’s arteries. The fact is that bad genes, bad
luck, and the ravages of age eventually take their toll on all of us —
even the most careful of us. The economics of the Canadian system
reflect this very different philosophy: it’s built on the belief that
maintaining health is not an individual responsibility, but a collective
one. Since none of us controls fate, the least we can do is be there
for each other as our numbers come up.
This difference is expressed in a few different ways. First:
Canadians tend to think of tending to one’s health as one of your duties
as a citizen. You do what’s right because you don’t want to take up
space in the system, or put that burden on your fellow taxpayers.
Second, “taking care of yourself” has a slightly expanded definition
here, which includes a greater emphasis on public health. Canadians are
serious about not coming to work if you’re contagious, and seeing a
doctor ASAP if you need to. Staying healthy
includes not only diet and exercise; but also taking care to keep your
germs to yourself, avoiding stress, and getting things treated while
they’re still small and cheap to fix.
Third, there’s a somewhat larger awareness that stress leads to
big-ticket illnesses — and a somewhat lower cultural tolerance for
employers who put people in high-stress situations. Nobody wants to pick
up the tab for their greed. And finally, there’s a generally greater
acceptance on the part of both the elderly and their families that
end-of-life heroics may be drawing resources away from people who might
put them to better use. You can have them if you want them; but
reasonable and compassionate people should be able to take the larger
view.
The bottom line: When it comes to getting people to make healthy
choices, appealing to their sense of the common good seems to work at
least as well as Calvinist moralizing.
10. This all sounds great — but the taxes to cover it are
just unaffordable. And besides, isn’t the system in bad financial shape?
False. On one hand, our annual Canadian tax bite runs about 10% higher than our U.S.
taxes did. On the other, we’re not paying out the equivalent of two new
car payments every month to keep the family insured here. When you
balance out the difference, we’re actually money ahead. When you factor
in the greatly increased social stability that follows when everybody’s
getting their necessary health care, the impact on our quality of life
becomes even more signficant.
And True — but only because this is a universal truth that we need to
make our peace with. Yes, the provincial plans are always struggling.
So is every single publicly-funded health care system in the world,
including the VA and Medicare. There’s always
tension between what the users of the system want, and what the
taxpayers are willing to pay. The balance of power ebbs and flows
between them; but no matter where it lies at any given moment, at least
one of the pair is always going to be at least somewhat unhappy.
But, as many of us know all too well, there’s also constant tension
between what patients want and what private insurers are willing to pay.
At least when it’s in government hands, we can demand some
accountability. And my experience in Canada has convinced me that this
accountability is what makes all the difference between the two systems.
It is true that Canada’s system is not the same as the U.S.
system. It’s designed to deliver a somewhat different product, to a
population that has somewhat different expectations. But the end result
is that the vast majority of Canadians get the vast majority of what
they need the vast majority of the time. It’ll be a good day when when
Americans can hold their heads high and proudly make that same
declaration.
Next week: More mythbusting on common conservative canards about efficiency, innovation, and competitiveness.
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