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Long Waits for Health Care
Plague Canada |
| By Sean Parnell, The Heartland Institute |
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Canadians seeking health care continue to be plagued by long waits, according to a recent report from The Fraser Institute.
Released
in October 2005, Waiting Your Turn: Hospital Waiting Lists In Canada
found the median wait from the time a patient was referred by a general
practitioner until the time he or she actually received treatment was
17.7 weeks. (Median wait means half of all patients waited less and
half waited longer.)
The report by Nadeem Esmail, senior
health policy analyst for Fraser, and Michael Walker, senior fellow and
president of the Fraser Institute Foundation, was the fifteenth annual
study of wait lists for health care in Canada.
Waits
varied by province and by specialty, the study noted. Ontario had the
shortest median wait at 16.3 weeks, while Saskatchewan had the longest,
25.5 weeks. Cancer patients had the shortest median wait--5.5 weeks for
medical oncology and 5.7 weeks for radiation oncology. Orthopedic
patients had the longest waits, at 40 weeks. There is no comparable
measurement for waits in the United States because health care
generally remains in the private sector and long waits for needed care
are typically not a problem. |
Such
long waits for needed care jeopardize patient health, according to many
doctors and health policy experts. A 2004 survey of Canadian health
care professionals, conducted by Ipsos-Reid on behalf of the Canadian
Medical Association and Canadian Nurses Association, revealed
significant concerns.
"The primary consequence of delayed
access [to health care] is the worsening conditions of their patients,"
the survey found. It also reported 12 percent of physicians and 4
percent of nurses believe they have had patients die specifically
because of long waits for needed care.
"Long waits can
have several consequences," explains Dr. Robert Hamilton, a retired
surgeon in Illinois. "Chronic conditions can become acute, with
increased morbidity and mortality, and curable malignancies may become
incurable." Hamilton also notes many orthopedic procedures, such as hip
replacement and knee replacement, are done to relieve pain, which can
be severe while a patient is forced to wait.
Canadians
fed up with waiting months or even years for treatment are finding ways
around the government-run system. CBS News reported in a March 20, 2005
story the tale of Jane Pelton of Ottawa, mother of a teenager who was
told it would take up to three years for surgery to repair a torn knee
ligament. Rather than watch her daughter wear a knee brace and suffer
for three years, Pelton opted to go to a private clinic in Vancouver
for surgery, which cost $3,300. "Every day we're paying for health
care, yet when we go to access it, it's just not there," said Pelton,
in comments aimed at the government system her taxes pay for and is
supposed to guarantee free care. "It's like somebody's telling you that
you can buy this car, and you've paid for the car, but you can't have
it right now." |
Some
Canadians have resorted to lawsuits to get the care they need in what
they and their doctors believe is a reasonable time. In June 2005, the
Supreme Court of Canada ruled Quebec could not ban private health insurance
for services covered under the government-run system. The lawsuit was
brought by a Canadian doctor, Jacques Chaoulli, and Montreal
businessman George Zeliotis, who waited a year for hip replacement
surgery.
"Access to a waiting list is not access to health care," the Supreme Court said in its ruling striking down Quebec's ban.
A
similar lawsuit was filed in Quebec on behalf of 10,000 women with
breast cancer who were forced into long waits for radiation therapy.
Anahit Cilinger was one such patient. After having a lymph node removed
in October 1999, she was put on a waiting list for radiation therapy.
Three months later and with no end to the waiting in sight, she
traveled to her native Turkey and paid $12,000 for the treatment.
"I don't want other sick people to have to go through the kind of suffering I did," Cilinger told Ingrid Peretz of The Globe and Mail in a March 10, 2004 interview. |
Canada's
government-run health care system has long been plagued by wait lists,
due in large part to the system's reliance on global budgets as a
cost-control measure. Under global budgets, the government sets an
overall limit on how much it will pay for health care, which forces
hospitals and doctors to restrict the availability of care.
John
Graham, director of health care studies at the Pacific Research
Institute and a former resident of Canada, has long criticized global
budgets as the cause of long waits. "Generally speaking, provincial
governments give fixed, global budgets to hospitals annually," Graham
said. "Therefore, when a patient is admitted to a hospital, it costs
the hospital money instead of earning it. This means hospitals have no
incentive to cut down waiting lists." In the United States, several
states have considered enacting a single-payer system that would impose
global budgets on health care spending for their citizens. California
and Oregon voters have rejected initiatives to establish single-payer
systems, and in 2005 Vermont's state legislature passed a scaled-down
single-payer bill that was later vetoed by Gov. Jim Douglas (R). |
The
authors of Waiting Your Turn do not see an end to excessive waits for
needed care in Canada any time soon. The Canadian federal government
pledged in 2004 to increase spending on health care by $41 billion
(Canadian) over the next 10 years to address wait lists, but Esmail and
Walker point to the fact that additional spending in the past has not
led to reductions in wait times.
"[P]rovinces that spend
more on health care are not rewarded with shorter waiting lists,"
Esmail and Walker write. They conclude that as long as Canada keeps a
single-payer health care system, Canadian patients will continue to be
forced into long waits for needed care. "[U]nder the current
regime--first-dollar coverage with use limited by waiting, and crucial
medical resources priced and allocated by government--prospects for
improvement are dim."
"Many Americans look to Canada's
Medicare program as a panacea for what they perceive to be the American
health care system's failures," Esmail told Health Care News.
"These wonderful visions of Canada's socialized health program tend to
ignore the very real costs that system imposes on Canadians in need of
medically necessary care: long wait times that can stretch into months
or even years of painful and detrimental delay. The reality is that
Canada's Medicare program is a model for no one, not even Canada."
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Last Updated Mar. 30, 2006
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