Which system is better?
At this point in time, if you're basically healthy, covered by your employer, young and not pregnant (being rich and light-skinned really helps), you get better healthcare in the US. You get shorter wait times, better technology and more highly-trained specialists to choose from.
Which country has the overall best system?
Well canada's is cheaper as a percentage of GDP by about 4-10%, depending on sources. Healthcare costs Americans about $4200 per capita, almost double the next highest of OECD countries, Switzerland ($2700), and Canada ($2300).
Much of the discrepancy comes from administrative inefficiency in the US system:
It is well known that 46 million Americans are without any health insurance. This includes Medicaid.
From the National Post, April 27, 2000:
There's a lot more to say, but this should kick off the discussion by showing that the Canadian system, for all its flaws (thanks to the Liberals, mostly), is more equitable, more efficient and provides equal or better patient outcomes in most cases.
About US insurance coverage
Healthcare comparison of US vs other OECD members
At this point in time, if you're basically healthy, covered by your employer, young and not pregnant (being rich and light-skinned really helps), you get better healthcare in the US. You get shorter wait times, better technology and more highly-trained specialists to choose from.
Which country has the overall best system?
Well canada's is cheaper as a percentage of GDP by about 4-10%, depending on sources. Healthcare costs Americans about $4200 per capita, almost double the next highest of OECD countries, Switzerland ($2700), and Canada ($2300).
Much of the discrepancy comes from administrative inefficiency in the US system:
inefficient and most private companies are not. It was a recurring theme during the public debates when the Clinton Administration attempted to introduce universal health care coverage. The belief held sway in that era, despite the existence of a 1991 government-initiated survey showing that the administrative costs of Medicare were 3%, as opposed to 25% for private insurance companies.
In the same year, Steffie Woolhandler, MD, MPH, and David U. Himmelstein, MD, reported in The New England Journal of Medicine that people in the U.S. spent about $450 per capita on health care administration in 1987, as compared with Canadians who spent one third as much. (Canada has a national health insurance system that covers virtually everyone.) Now Dr. Woolhandler and Dr. Himmelstein have joined forces with Terry Campbell, MHA, of the Canadian Institute for Health Information, Ottawa, to conduct a comparison study of the costs of health care administration in the U.S. and Canada. They wanted to see whether the introduction of computers, managed care, and more businesslike approaches to health care delivery have decreased the administrative costs in the U.S. The results, published recently in The New England Journal of Medicine (August 21), were not encouraging. In 1999, health administration costs in the USA were $1,059 per capita, as compared with $304 per capita in Canada. As for individual doctors, their administrative costs were far lower in Canada.
It is well known that 46 million Americans are without any health insurance. This includes Medicaid.
From the National Post, April 27, 2000:
US Study:
Medical Bills Main Culprit In Bankruptcies Americans are 'one illness away' from financial collapse
by Araminta Wordsworth
Ruinous health-care costs, not profligate spending, are the leading cause of personal bankruptcy among Americans, a new study has found.
"The American middle class is solid and secure and prosperous -- we are unlike anything ever known in history -- yet American families live just one illness or accident away from complete financial collapse," one of the study authors, Elizabeth Warren, said yesterday.
About 500,000 people sought bankruptcy protection in the United States last year because of the crushing burden of medical expenses, says the study, to be published next month in Norton's Bankruptcy Adviser, a specialty periodical for lawyers.
The number equals about half the one million Americans who filed for bankruptcy protection last year.
Prof. Warren, a professor of law at Harvard Law School, said the results are a direct consequence of the U.S. health system, which requires each family to deal individually with its health problems and pay the price.
Americans are more enthusiastic about their free-market health-care system than Canadians are about their publicly funded medicare system, but Canadians' care needs are actually better met than those of their U.S. counterparts.
The main beef with the system in the U.S. is the cost, while in Canada, the principal complaint is the wait for services. Spending on health is $4,270 (U.S.) per capita in the U.S. and $2,250 in Canada. That's 13 per cent of the gross domestic product in the U.S. and 9.1 per cent in Canada. Despite the big difference in costs, there are only minor differences in use of services, and in health outcomes, the survey found.
First Published in The Wall St Journal, Nov 12, 2003
There's a lot more to say, but this should kick off the discussion by showing that the Canadian system, for all its flaws (thanks to the Liberals, mostly), is more equitable, more efficient and provides equal or better patient outcomes in most cases.
About US insurance coverage
Healthcare comparison of US vs other OECD members