sunnyside wrote:Lazar wrote:
But the fact remains that the US has the most expensive health care system of any developed country and doesn't get the results to justify it.
Alright, so everyone seems to be talking about this. Republican talking heads have been acting like it'll kill us all, Democrats act like so long as it's nationalized health care it's just as good as the US system even in some backwoods African/South Asia country with a life expectancy in the 30s.
So I poked around for some info. Little hard to find stuff. But I did find numbers for MRI wait times.
Uk wait time 7.5 weeks average
http://www.privatehealth.co.uk/news/jul ... -ct-scans/
Canada 10.1 weeks 2007
http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2007/10/ ... raser.html
United States 0 wait. That's how it had been in the limited instances it's come up with family members. But, while the US doesn't do studies (because there isn't much to study I guess) I found info on New York. It wasn't a question of wait times for an MRI machine, it was a question of how long the hospitals bothered to staff them and how utilized they were. So if you need an MRI done there is likely a machine around not in use.
http://www.myhealthfinder.com/hcac/MRIreport03.pdf
While at that I also found a good study (from Sweden it seems) comparing wait times for US Veterans hospitals, regular US hospitals, Candadian, UK, and Sweedish hospitals.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0735-1097(94)00442-S
(you can click on the pdf option for full text, scrolling down it's pretty well spelled out in the figures)
Suffice it to say I hope I'm inside the US if I ever need a coronary angiography, electivly OR urgently.
One interesting thing there is the VA hospitals are notably worse. Also it seems hospitals with larger percentages of HMO business are worse on MRIs.
http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/reprint/17/5/195
I wanted to find something about a newer procedure, but I'm not a doctor and don't know what is really cutting edge. Any of you are welcome to look around yourselves, but I think we all know what the general trend will be. I started looking into minimally invasive aortic aneurysm surgery, looks like Canada might be a bit backwards there.
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6963/7/182
And the US certainly has a lot of places that do it. But maybe everyplace actually picked it up last year, I really don't have the time to look right now.
Point is. The US system IS significantly better * Though I don't know about outcomes. We're also the fattest nation. So maybe having a long wait time is balanced out by a few dozen Wendy's Baconators
*when you have decent insurance handled by a private company.
If we had a single-payer system, it would cut out profits and marketing,
That, by the way, would be solved by the Co-op concept that is floating around now if you''ve seen it. As a non-profit member owned enterprise (which there are a number of in the US already which should make the Liberal Socialists happy) it wouldn't need profit margin beyond padding for hard times. And possibly wouldn't need marketing. Though again we're only talking about a couple percentages. Still, I'd consider joining something like that.
it would reduce needless duplication of equipment and personnel, and it would make the claims process much simpler because everyone would be covered for all necessary care, with no consideration of pre-existing conditions. And it would let us eliminate fragmented government health programs like Medicaid and SCHIP,
This stuff is possibly true, depending on exicution.
and it would take a tremendous burden off of American businesses because they wouldn't have to provide health care as a benefit.
Actually I believe the proposed laws all tighten the screws on business. Though conceivably you could create a plan that shifts all the burden onto taxpayers.
And last time I checked, public universities haven't put private ones out of business, and the Post Office hasn't put UPS and FedEx out of business.
Well, if someone decided that tax payers would subsidize the post office such that it always costs a buck to ship anything anywhere it would.
The primary difference in the comparison is that if you join up with a public university you can't just waltz into a class at a private university. If you created a system where, there are signficant differences in the standard of care between public option and private option people, than yes, you could probably create a system where you don't degrade the overall quality of care in America while providing reasonably priced care for all.
But nobody is really talking about that at this point in the US. Though I thought that things were more like that in the UK. I wonder why their wait times are so bad. Is it that a lot of people are on the state system and that's
really bad while non state is actually good so on average they're just bad?