Rabid Sanity Tackles Health Care

In an exchange I had with Steve at Rabid Sanity regarding health care, he referred me to two articles that take issue with the current low ranking by World Health Organization of the United States’ health care system against other industrialized countries. We’re 37th. The two articles dispute the rankings, saying they are biased in favor or state-run systems. Our system is not “perfect” one admits, but is probably the best in the world.

The first article is How surveys twist rankings on health care, by Glen Whitman. The problem is, he says, the objectives of the study.

The most obvious bias is that 62.5 percent of their weighting concerns not quality of service but equality. In other words, the rankings are less concerned with the ability of a health system to make sick people better than with the political consideration of achieving equal access and state-controlled funding.

This, he says, is a flaw in the study. The United States is very good at making sick people better – not all sick people, but that’s not the point. A health care system should be measured by its abilities, and not its delivery capacity. That 47 million of us are without insurance? Not an issue. Bias.

The rankings include measures for “health level” and “responsiveness.” “Health level” is their way of saying life expectancy, while “responsiveness” refers to a survey based on “respect for persons” and elements such as speed of service, convenience and choice — yet even in these cases half the overall weighting is determined by considerations of equality. Thus, a country with a poor level of “responsiveness” throughout the population will score higher than a country with a good level in some parts and an excellent level in others.

It’s in the eye of the beholder, I guess. Whitman is a professor of economics, and is not concerned about equality. And he is right: If you only measure the people we actually take care of in this country, we’re the toast of the town.

The second article, Ranking the U.S. Health-Care System, by Jim Peron (for whom it gives no credentials), says pretty much the same thing, but from a doctrinal standpoint. Peron starts off by using the word “socialist” as a pejorative, so it’s not hard to see where he’s going. Referring to a study by the Commonwealth Fund that also ranked the U.S. very low, he says

The Commonwealth Fund marked down the United States partly because “All other major industrialized nations provide universal health coverage, and most of them have comprehensive benefits packages with no cost-sharing by the patients.” Again the American system loses points because it doesn’t provide socialized medicine. And the Times neglected to note that “no cost-sharing” means the people have paid through taxes whether they receive the care or not.

This is a curiosity. The concept of insurance is based on shared risk, no different than coverage of people’s health care through taxation, also a shared-risk system. But Peron presumes that private insurance is a superior model because it is not based on taxation. That’s nothing more than personal bias.

This is priceless:

This issue is not unknown to the Commonwealth Fund. In 1999 it
published The Elderly’s Experiences with Health Care in Five Nations, which found significant delays for “serious surgery.” Only 4 percent of the American seniors reported long waits for serious surgery. The rate was 11 percent in Canada and 13 percent in Britain. For non-serious surgery the differences were more obvious: 7 percent in the United States, 40 percent in Canada, and 51 percent in Britain.

He’s talking about seniors. He doesn’t seem to realize it, but he’s comparing our Medicare, or government-sponsored system that is supported by taxes, with other countries. I’m happy that Medicare is doing well in that regard. It’s a well-run system.

In other areas, Peron simply offers up weak, made-up-on-the-spot excuses.

The United States also lost credit because fewer Americans report having a regular doctor for five years or more. But Americans are more mobile than many other people.CNN reports that Americans move every five years on average.

He does that in other areas as well, as in emergent care wait periods, lack of centralized medical records, and the number of patient complaints. (“But different cultures have different attitudes toward complaining.”)

It’s all illuminating, but not of the relative merits of health care systems. In terms of equality and delivery of care, the U.S. lags far behind other countries. But these articles, and Steve’s post to begin with, shine a light not on study biases, but rather on right wing biases. Yes, we don’t offer care to everyone. We don’t intend to! Yes, our care for the wealthy and well-insured is excellent. Those are the people the system is meant to serve.

The system works as it is intended to work, delivering excellent care to insiders, and poor or no care to outsiders. When we debate conservatives like Steve on this issue, that is the subtext, and the issue we need to highlight. Conservatives are far too caught up in rewarding the financially well-off. In health care, that’s a poor objective. Even if they attain it, they have failed us.

For that reason, they need to step aside and let us “socialists” fix our health care system. It’s long overdue. We have real answers while they offer nothing other than a curtsy to Ayn Rand.

6 thoughts on “Rabid Sanity Tackles Health Care

  1. Great summation, Mark. I had this very argument the other night (I’m in the Czech Rep. for a few weeks) He was perturbed that he has to pay into the state run system–that in fact, at least here, it’s illegal to offer alternative insurance. We ran down the pros and cons of cost vs. care vs. quality. Wish you’d been here. The wedding party was fun, too.

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  2. America’s socialized banking system, socialilzed agrucultural system, energy, transportation, education …am I leaving anyone out? Oh, how the right hates workers.

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  3. Somewhat anecdotal, I suppose. But yes – Cuba was ranked alongside ours in the thirties somewhere because no matter how blockade-disabled they are, they do try to take care of everyone.

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