In recent years, patients
treated by the Canadian
health care system have
increasingly experienced
lengthy waits to see providers.
According a new study on medical
care in Canada, released in October
2006 by the Fraser Institute, “waiting
times are the legacy of a medical system
offering low expectations cloaked
in lofty rhetoric.”
Since the mid-1980s, the Vancouver- based
think tank has produced an
annual report on how long patients
are required to wait for medical care
in Canada. As a result of the group’s
research, treatment waiting times are
now part of the public policy debate
on the quality of the Canadian health
care system.
In its 16th annual installment, the
report titled “Waiting Your Turn”
tracks how waiting times vary across
Canadian provinces depending on
the type of treatment needed. The
report also documents waiting times
for referral to specialists and the
subsequent amount of time spent
waiting for actual treatment from the
specialist.
“Despite all of the promises made
by Canada’s provincial and federal
governments, and despite the fact that Canadians are spending more on
health care than ever before, the total
wait time in Canada continues to hover
near the 18-week mark as it has since
2003,” coauthor Nadeem Esmail said in
an interview for this article. “Equally
troubling is the reality that the total
wait time in 2006 is 91 percent longer
than it was in 1993.”
These findings should give pause to
proponents of universal coverage, who
often cite Canada as an example of a
country where health care costs less
than care in the United States and
everyone has free health care at the
point of service.
“While many proclaim Canada’s
Medicare program to be one of the
best in the world, or suggest it should
be the model for reform in the United
States,” Esmail said, “the reality is that
health spending in Canada outpaces
that in most other developed nations
that, like Canada, guarantee access to
care regardless of ability to pay, and
yet access to health care in this country
lags that available in most of these other
nations.”
In 2006, the average amount of time
spent waiting to receive treatment after
referral by a general practitioner averaged 17.8 weeks across Canada. At 14.9
weeks, Ontario had the shortest waits.
Prince Edward Island, Saskatchewan,
and New Brunswick had average waits
of 25.8 weeks, 28.5 weeks, and 31.9
weeks, respectively.
Patients referred to a neurosurgeon
waited an average of 21 weeks just to see
a specialist. Getting treatment required
an additional 10.7 weeks.
Patients waited an average of 16.2
weeks to see an orthopedic surgeon, and
another 24.2 weeks for treatment to be
performed after the initial visit.
The number of people routinely waiting
for services is staggering, according
to the report. In 2003, the most recent
year for which data were available
from Statistics Canada, approximately
1.1 million people had trouble accessing
care on a timely basis.
About 201,000 had problems obtaining
non-emergency services. An additional
607,000 had problems getting in to see
a specialist, and about 301,000 patients
experienced problems obtaining diagnostic
procedures.
“So much for the myth of government-
run health care being compassionate
and fair,” said David Gratzer, a
Canadian doctor and senior fellow at the
Manhattan Institute. “Canadians wait
and wait and wait.”
In Canada, waiting lists are considered a
way of rationing medical care and holding
down health care spending. Because health care in Canada is largely free at
the point of service, demand is likely to
exceed supply.
In a typical market system, the price
would adjust to the point where the
quantity of services provided is equal
to the amount patients are willing to
buy. But in a system devoid of a market
mechanism, scarce resources are
rationed through means other than
price.
“The long waits for needed care in
Canada show the danger of abandoning
markets in favor of central planning,”
explained Sean Parnell, vice president
of external relations at The Heartland
Institute, an Illinois-based think tank.
“Just as there were long lines for food
and other basic necessities in the old
Soviet Union because planners couldn’t
accurately match supply with demand,
the politicians and bureaucrats who
run health care in Canada can’t provide
enough health care to meet the citizens’
needs.”
Gratzer agreed.“It’s like the old Soviet system,”
Gratzer said. “Everything is free, but
nothing is readily available. Except that
we’re not talking about lining up for toilet
paper in Russia in 1976, but queuing
for surgery in Canada in 2006.”
Economists generally agree such “non-price” rationing of resources is less
efficient than a system that uses prices.
One reason is that productivity is lost
when people are unable to work due to
treatment delays. Also, the risk of death while waiting is higher for serious conditions
such as cardiac care.
Waiting lists are consequences of the
way the Canadian health care system
is structured, not a lack of money, critics
say.
“The fact that this is the 16th annual
report on wait lists for needed care
should be enough to prove that the
problem isn’t a temporary one that can
be fixed with just a little more money, as
defenders of Canada’s government-run
system have claimed for years,” Parnell
said.
“Long waits and widespread denial of
needed care are a permanent and necessary
part of government-run systems,”
Parnell noted.
Devon M. Herrick, Ph.D. (devon.herrick@ncpa.org) is a health economist and
senior fellow at the National Center for
Policy Analysis.