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Best health care? Look to Europe
Tuesday, 05 September 2006 17:57
Mark West
One of the great marvels of the modern world is that European nations are capable of providing health care for all their citizens.

The United States, of course, cannot do so.  We are told that it would cost too much, that it would make American businesses noncompetitive in the world marketplace, and that the government is incapable of providing services efficiently.

How the Europeans manage, then, is one of those grand mysteries that we must simply accept as so; like the bumble bee, who flies despite the ample scientific evidence suggesting it is not possible, perhaps European leaders are as ill-versed in economics as the bumblebee in physics.

Conservative commentators will regale us with tales of how poorly the health care works in other countries, as it is rationed. But I suspect that the people who complain that they have not received their own elective surgery and a timely fashion in other countries are the same sorts of people who clog U.S. courts with lawsuits against their doctors. 

Of course, when the service is provided for free, it must be rationed; and that means that the sorts of people who are constantly in the doctorës office for elective matters will be disappointed.  Rush Limbaughës "back pain," for example, would perhaps go untreated in any system involving publicly provided medicine, and that oxycodone would be saved for people who actually needed it.  Viagra treatments would be withheld for those with actual dysfunctions, rather than being pimped on television as a date enhancing drug for the Geritol set.


But it seems certain to me that the inability of a few to receive the elective surgeries they might want is more than balanced by the ability of the many to receive the health care they need.


And that health care is good indeed.  I have always thought that a good indicator of where the best health care was to be had could be found by watching for where third world dictators sought health care.  France seems to be the current winner, with Italy and the United States somewhere behind. 

In France, emergency medicine is provided at little or no cost, even in the smallest hamlets, to whoever needs it.  We discovered this once when touring, when a member of our group fell and cut her head. Once we figured out where her house and office were, the local doctor stitched her up, filled out a form, gave her some medicine and sent her on her way.  The lengthy delay for interrogation concerning insurance matters that seems to be a staple of U.S.  emergency room procedure was mercifully absent.

Another time, when we were traveling in Italy, a member of our group fainted.  It was a hot day, and she hadnët been eating properly, but a passerby saw her tumble to the ground and alerted the local medic.  Within a couple of minutes, an ambulance appeared, and our friend was taken to the hospital for an MRI ÇƒÏ just to be sure that there wasnët anything alarming going on.  And, just to be sure, she was encouraged to spend the night.


Yes, they knew she was a tourist; and no, there was no charge. 


Such are the benefits of visiting a civilized nation.


We could have such benefits here, couldnët we?  Or are we willing to say that the 45 million uninsured Americans donët deserve it because theyëre lazy?  Or are we willing to admit that the Europeans can do something that we canët?


Among world health organizations, there is one so efficient that it delivers 98 percent of the money it receives to patients, compared to the 70 percent of the U.S. insurance industry.  This system is studied and emulated by other industrial nations, and it is a single-payer program under the control of a government ÇƒÓ precisely the sort of plan that Republicans and the health-care industry say canët work.

Itës Medicare ǃӠ right here in the U.S., run by the U.S. government, provides fantastically efficient single-payer health insurance. Medicare is so efficient that it is studied by other nations, and emulated by them.

It isnët that we canët do single-payer in the U.S.  Itës that we wonët, so long as major candidates receive vast sums of money from the health insurance industry, with Hilary Clinton currently the top
Congressional fund-raiser from that odious source. 


Democrats, on this topic, are no better than Republicans.  They have all bought the ǃÚmanaged careë fantasies of the insurance industry that are really little more than ǃÚprofits as usual;ë and, in return, they have accepted immense campaign contributions. 


And it is the American public that suffers as a result.

ï
Mark West is a professor at UNC Asheville.
 



 


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