By Robert M. Goldberg on 2.20.09 @ 6:05AM
Ten ways to resist the single-payer fixes that our new leader has
in store for us.
The Top Ten Myths of American Health Care: A
Citizen's Guide
By Sally C. Pipes
(Pacific Research Institute, 182 pages,
$24.95)
President Barack Obama has promised to fundamentally change
America's health care system. But before he and his team get to
work, they'd do well to read Sally Pipes's new book.
The Top Ten Myths of American Health Care: A Citizen's
Guide clearly and concisely explicates even the most
esoteric aspects of the health care debate. Pipes's rare
combination of expertise and understandable prose makes the book
a must-read for anyone interested in diagnosing and curing the
problems plaguing the American health care system.
One of the first myths Pipes demolishes is the oft-cited
statistic that some 46 million Americans lack health insurance.
Almost 18 million of those folks make more than $50,000 a year,
while 10 million make more than $75,000. That means 38 percent of
the uninsured likely make enough to afford health insurance but
choose not to buy it.
An additional 14 million are, Pipes notes, "fully eligible for
generous government assistance programs like Medicare, Medicaid,
and SCHIP. The problem is, they're just not enrolling in these
programs." Pipes wonders, "If 14 million eligibles aren't
availing themselves of taxpayer-funded coverage, then why should
we think that a still bigger government health care bureaucracy
will solve the problem?"
Of course, there are many Americans who legitimately can't afford
insurance. Others are paying too much for the coverage they have.
President Obama believes the answer is government-provided health
care: "If I were designing a system from scratch, I would
probably go ahead with a single-payer system."
Many people think that's the only humane alternative. Pipes
disagrees. "It is government monopoly health care that is
heartless and uncaring. And the inferior treatments it provides
come with a very steep price tag -- rationed care, lack of access
to tests, with the latest technological equipment, and long
waiting lists."
Pipes knows whereof she speaks. She's a Canadian citizen who
escaped to California to live and tell about her experiences
under a single-payer system.
She illustrates Canada's cost-cutting measures that deny access
to new drugs with a personal anecdote. Her uncle was diagnosed
with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma five years ago. "If he'd lived in
America, the miracle drug Rituxan might have saved him," she
writes. "But Rituxan wasn't approved for use in Canada, and he
lost his battle with cancer."
As Pipes learned firsthand, "To save funds, Canadian health
officials routinely delay the approval of new and more expensive
drugs." Of the hundred new drugs launched in the U.S. from 1997
through 1999, only 43 made it to Canada during that time.
Canada's waiting lists are legendary -- over 800,000 Canadians
are on lists for surgery and other necessary treatments. The
average wait between a referral from a primary care doctor and
treatment by a specialist is 18 weeks. "That's almost double what
doctors consider clinically reasonable," Pipes points out.
In other socialized systems, things aren't any better. "Sweden's
waiting lists have led some patients to visit veterinarians,"
reveals Pipes.
Part of the problem is a physician shortage. One out of ten
Canadians is seeking a primary care doctor. According to Pipes,
"Over the last decade, about 11 percent of physicians trained in
Canadian medical schools have moved to the United States." This
is in large part due to a massive pay discrepancy. "The average
Canadian doctor earns only 42 percent of what a doctor earns in
the United States," says Pipes.
Pipes concludes her book with potential solutions for our health
care problems. She points out that most regulations governing
health care are designed to protect a system with a "disconnect
between provider and consumer." She proposes that individuals be
free to shop for insurance across state lines, thus injecting a
hefty dose of competition into the insurance market.
Pipes also argues that the tax breaks on health care enjoyed by
corporations should be extended to individual consumers. As she
notes, the current system guarantees that "people wind up with
coverage that's in their employer's best interest, not theirs."
The U.S. health system is broken. President Obama promises to fix
it. With her new book, Pipes has provided his administration with
an admirable toolkit.
topics:
Health Care