1968eric wrote on Jul 27th, 2009 at 11:24am:As for the reason meds are cheaper in Canada - if memory serves, its because Canada threatens the drug companies to disregard their patent and reproduce the drugs if the drug companies don't agree to sell the drugs in Canada at prices Canada wants. I wonder what that does to the prices of the drugs in the U.S.
No, Canada has never threatened to ignore patents, as far as I know. What they do is negotiate for price - if there are 15 different medicines that can be used to treat blood pressure, they may decline to carry one of those if the manufacturer won't offer a bulk discount. At the end of the day, Canada has plenty of medicines for controlling blood pressure, and it costs less.
Prices for drugs in the US are not much affected by what Canadians pay - the fact that one person at a market haggles for a good price does nothing to harm or protect the next guy who comes along (especially when the second guy is obviously willing to pay whatever the vendor asks).
1968eric wrote on Jul 27th, 2009 at 11:24am:Monty that very small general life expectancy difference is meaningless and has no obvious correlation to differing health care systems.
What? A 3 year difference in lifespan is SIGNIFICANT.
Multiply that times 300 million people, and it is VERY SIGNIFICANT. Would you rather be born as an average person in a country where the lifespan was 65 years, or in one where the average lifespan was 70 years??
How much of that 3 years is related to the healthcare systems? That is difficult to say .... But what is evident is that Canadian society has managed to achieve a very long lifespan, they spend less, and people do not lose their coverage due to pre-existing conditions or unemployment.
Quote:In Canada the cancer death rate is 16% higher than in the U.S.
And what do you assume that means? Kentucky and Louisiana have a cancer mortality rate that is 65% higher than Utah and Hawaii. Even though Blue-Cross Blue Shield offers similar policies in all four states. What you are missing is the fact that the death rate from cancer is primarily driven by how many people get cancer in the first place - some types are treatable, but many types are not. More people getting cancer = more people dying of it.
What happens when we take cancer data and pool the Canadian provinces with the US states? The 60 states/provinces blend together with no national differences to comment on. Ontario and Saskatchewan are right at the average for the large group, British Columbia and Alberta have rather low rates, and the Maritimes are on the high end with Tennessee and Alabama. Only Nunavut (with a few thousand Innuits) has a remarkably high cancer mortality rate.
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Looking at that data gives a very different picture from the cherry-picked statistics you presented.
Quote:The colon cancer rate in Canada is 25% higher than in the U.S. because they can't get colonoscopies in Canada.
No - that is a misleading statistic and a dubious conclusion. That '25%' difference cannot be used for comparison ... 12% of Canadian cancer deaths are from colon cancer, while 10% are from colon cancer in the US, which can be rendered as '25% more.' But those are RELATIVE percents ... if less people die from lung cancer, the percent of deaths from colon cancer would increase, even if the number of people dying from colon cancer remained the same. Comparing across groups in that way is an apples/oranges comparison ... the 10% makes sense only when discussing US numbers, the 12% makes sense only when discussing Canadian numbers ...
Are some doctors in Canada pushing for more colonoscopies? Yes. Do they currently have the infrastructure? No, it would have to be added. Is early screening and treatment a good thing? Only sometimes. Colonoscopies are far more invasive than other cancer screening tests, and have a complication rate that is 10x higher than other routine tests (a friend's father died of a torn membrane from a colonoscopy). Doubling the rate of colonoscopies will not cut the death rate in half, but it will double the number of serious complications. We don't have people jump up on the x-ray machine for every cough and cold ... the risks are higher than the benefits.
Quote:Cancer patients here don't wait 8 weeks to begin radiation therapy.
Quote: 6 months wait for breast cancer treatment is not unusual in Canada as opposed to days here in the States.
Average wait for radiation therapy in breast cancer is 40 days in the US, 73 days in Canada ... sounds bad, yet Canadian women have a lower death rate from that disease. I know if it were my wife or daughter, I would want to maximize chances of survival, not minimize wait (even though not doing something can be emotionally excruciating).
Likewise, with prostate cancer (#2 cancer killer of men), 'watchful waiting' often makes more sense than rushing to surgery or radiation. The cancer may be very slow growing, and a long wait (which adds to the average) doesn't change the risk of dying or surviving. In an older person, surgery may pose a greater danger to life than doing nothing.
People that have advanced cancer are probably already gone. People that have early, treatable cancer need prompt treatment, but not immediate treatment. Is the one month average wait in the US too long? Is one week too long? Two weeks too long? What about 3 or 4 weeks? Emotionally, yes, that seems like a long time. Medically, it may not be.
Quote: I'm not talking about prescriptions, but about the health care itself.
What is health care itself if not Diagnosis and Treatment? Prescription medicine is a big component of Treatment, and it is one that sends many thousands of people over the border into Canada, where that component of treatment is better in several ways. When millions of US Americans have to choose between food and medicine, that DOES impact health care itself. When hundreds of people post to this board that they can't afford medicine, that is an indication that the health care system has some real shortcomings.