Cyberyeti, on 2017-March-02, 08:29, said:
That you don't tax people enough to put in place a European style health system, and that hospitals charge way too much for procedures.
Part of the problem is the cost of drugs. Canadians apparently pay the second highest drug prices, after the US. We pay, according to a recent CBC news story, on average 4x what people in New Zealand pay. Americans pay still more. This includes so-called generic drugs, where the cost of development has long been recovered by the original maker, so this seems likely to be mostly obscene gouging.
Part of the problem is too many tests. Doctors have pressures to order multiple tests, often to provide a placebo like assurance to patients. Perhaps also to avoid litigation. I have a bad back, with occasional sciatica on one side and femoral nerve pain on the other. I imagine many doctors would send me for an x-ray or MRI. My gp discussed this with me and said that either would be a waste of money. Clinically the diagnosis is obvious, and the problem isn't bad enough to warrant surgery, so there is no meaningful chance that imaging would alter treatment. So we agreed not to do it. My guess is that in the US, and with many Canadian doctors, I'd simply have been referred to radiology.
Part of the problem is the extremely high incomes doctors make in the US.
Part of the problem is the profit motive behind hospitals
As an example of the results, my wife had to have a procedure a number of years ago. There was a wait list in BC (although it ended up far shorter than we were originally told) so I researched the cost in the US. The Cleveland Clinic wanted 125,000 for a procedure that would probably not require even one night in hospital. The cheapest I found was Oklahoma at 11,500. The cost to the government in BC was 5,000. And the success rate in BC matched that of the Cleveland Clinic.
As long as a society runs health care as a profit centre for the major players, with no mechanism nor incentive to keep costs or profits under control, then the results are predictable.
Having said that, if you have the money, then the US does provide the best care in the world. Thus the question is one of priorities. Maximal care for those fortunate enough to afford it, while leaving millions with terrible care and economically crushing those in-between, or providing worse (but still pretty good) care to everyone at a significantly lower cost.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari