Hopefully this myth that Canada's health care system is superior to ours will be dispelled soon. The US healthcare system is flawed in a number of ways, but at least our government doesn't force people to wait months for surgery and outlaw private companies from providing alternatives.
4/18/2006 8:29:22 PM
blame canada
4/18/2006 8:33:54 PM
CanadaIndicator Value Latest YearInfant mortality rate, both sexes (per 1000 live births) (?) 5.1 2000Life expectancy at birth (years) total population (?) 80.0 2003United States of AmericaIndicator Value Latest YearInfant mortality rate, both sexes (per 1000 live births) (?) 7.2 2000Life expectancy at birth (years) total population (?) 77. 2003source World Health Organizationwhat a myth it is.
4/18/2006 8:51:52 PM
thank god we never got hiliary care
4/18/2006 8:55:05 PM
^^ Not to diss your statistics but a larger percentage of the US population is made up of poor immigrants and poor minorities (blacks) all of which drag down our scores. That said, I have no doubt Canada's statistics are better than ours, just not by much. A purely socialized health-care system is preferrable to a bloated mixed system, such as exists in the U.S.[Edited on April 18, 2006 at 8:57 PM. Reason : ^]
4/18/2006 8:57:27 PM
4/18/2006 8:59:58 PM
with respect to mortality rates, the Canadian population is demographically different from America’s in important ways. The average age of the Canadian population is lower than that of the United States. There is less obesity in Canada, fewer premature births, fewer victims of assault and attempted homicide. Canadians also drive fewer miles per year than Americans. The racial makeup of the countries are different, with a higher proportion of whites and lower proportion of blacks in Canada. These differences all skew life expectancy in Canada's favor.if you want to look a little deeper, try this study on Northwestern US states and Western Canadian provinces that have similar ethnic makeup (as different ethnic groups get cancer at different rates in the first place) and other characteristics for cancer fatality rates. See these tables and compare Colorado, Idaho, and Utah with the Canadian Western provinces. For instance, Utah and Alberta have almost identical cancer incidence rates at 307 and 312.8 respectively but the male case fatality rates are .3456 and .43798 respectively. British Columbia scores lowest in case fatality rates of all Canadian provinces and yet it is worse than almost half the US states.http://www.canceradvocacy.ca/pages/stats-mortalality-fatality.htm[Edited on April 18, 2006 at 9:01 PM. Reason : 2]
4/18/2006 9:01:00 PM
2004 US immigrant population34 million http://www.cis.org/articles/2004/back1204release.htmltotalabout 290 milliontherefore around 12%http://www40.statcan.ca/l01/cst01/demo46a.htmcanada had 16-18% from 91 to 01
4/18/2006 9:07:29 PM
^I'm not even sure what that is supposed to indicate, but Canada's racial makeup clearly affects life expectancy. To argue otherwise would be foolish.^^^Yes, we spend a shit-ton on our health. But at least we don't die waiting to get cancer treatment like many in Canada's bullshit system.Also, a very significant portion of our added health expenditures go towards drugs. We subsidize R&D for drugs that benifit the whole world. If we negotiated cut-rate prices for drugs like other countries, R&D would plummet and worldwide health would be negatively affected.[Edited on April 18, 2006 at 9:12 PM. Reason : 2]
4/18/2006 9:08:17 PM
http://www.canceradvocacy.ca/pages/stats-mortality-rates-all-sites.htmin all cancer cases when you rank the us and canadian provincesfirst is utahSIXTH is British Columbia8 of 10 canadian provinces listed are in the top 36
4/18/2006 9:12:07 PM
yes yeswe have great doctors and the best companies in the worldbut we get shit for our money. its fucking embarrassing (sp?) that we spend almost twice canada and have similar numbers. and that is with canada being a relatively high spender.
4/18/2006 9:13:45 PM
^^it figures, considering that incidence rates are MUCH higher in the US. We are talking about health care treatment here, not population demographics. Correspondingly, any cancer mortality rates which don't factor in the incidence rates are meaningless. Which is why my original link is relevant and yours is not.[Edited on April 18, 2006 at 9:17 PM. Reason : 2]
4/18/2006 9:16:50 PM
4/18/2006 9:21:32 PM
and my point is that if you are one of the 46 million americans who are uninsured you are fucked no matter what.
4/18/2006 9:23:06 PM
4/18/2006 9:28:07 PM
^facts show that blacks have shorter life expectancies across all income and insurance demographics. I am not gonna bother finding these facts. Its common knowledge to anyone in the medical profession, like the fact that women live longer than men.^^eh, not so much. It's not like they get denied emergency services. And some people like spending their money on other things rather than padding the margins of HMOs.Besides, Canada has a significant proportion of uninsured members as well. Because of doctor shortages, many Canadians, wealthy and poor, cannot find a family doctor and correspondingly have no coverage under their "universal" system.[Edited on April 18, 2006 at 9:29 PM. Reason : 2][Edited on April 18, 2006 at 9:31 PM. Reason : 2]
4/18/2006 9:29:14 PM
emergency room does not equal medical caresince you are so worried about cancer, how does an emergency room help with that?
4/18/2006 9:30:34 PM
actually, the emergency room is a definite form of medical care And uninsured people with cancer just have to be accountable for their decisions in life, like the rest of us.
4/18/2006 9:33:48 PM
4/18/2006 9:35:44 PM
the poor choose to be poor?Ignore the actual article, since its biased, but the study that the article is based upon is not.http://www.misterc.ca/healthcare_canada_vs_usa.htm
4/18/2006 9:38:38 PM
4/18/2006 9:40:00 PM
i'd also like to add that canadians smoke more pot than americans do... .just wanted to throw that out there...
4/18/2006 9:41:39 PM
Relation between income inequality and mortality in Canada and in the United States: cross sectional assessment using census data and vital statisticsNancy A Ross, research analyst, health analysis and modelling group, a Michael C Wolfson, director general, analysis and development branch, a James R Dunn, research associate, b Jean-Marie Berthelot, manager, health analysis and modelling group, a George A Kaplan, professor and chair, c John W Lynch, assistant professor. ca Statistics Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada K1A 0T6, b Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, Department of Health Care and Epidemiology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z3, c School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2029, USA
4/18/2006 9:46:07 PM
^^ [smack]
4/18/2006 9:48:53 PM
^^if that study was "race-blind", then it was seriously flawed. Likewise, if it didn't factor in higher homicide, assault and drug addiction rates of the US that are concentrated in poor urban areas, then the study is flawed and inconclusive. from your link above
4/19/2006 12:08:04 AM
4/19/2006 12:15:17 AM
I'm saying that when studying health care, you can't look at life expectancy rates between our 2 countries without factoring in demographic differences such as race and crime. They skew the data.
4/19/2006 12:20:54 AM
The do skew the data, but rightfully so. Blacks are and have been an integral part of society, and their health does reflect on the health care system as a whole, as well as other parts of society.It's disingenuous to completely ignore that statistic.Statistics of wait-time to see a specialist doesn't show the whole picture either. Does the Canadian system just work by first-come-first-serve, or is there a priority to the order of waiting? Can patients jump up in priority?
4/19/2006 12:27:31 AM
4/19/2006 12:33:22 AM
anything within 3 percentage points for opinion is unimportant.even if we say that that amount matters we are paying almost double for 3 percentage points "better" care? that doesnt seem absurd to you?i would say that crime is a product of the economic inequality that was mentioned, meaning that crime and poor healthcare are both symptoms of something else.as for race, how exactly does race affect this? are blacks unhealthy because they are racially inferior? NO. they do however have a higher level of poverty, because of lots of history, but how this poverty plays in healthcare is what the study was trying to establish. if our system gave every american who was willing to seek out care an equal chance of receiving quality healthcare there would be little to no correlation between quality of care and wealth. HOWEVER, there is a correlation. in canada, this correlation does not exist.
4/19/2006 12:36:00 AM
canada has been cracking lately in general...but thats due more to corruption and division than anything. plus, socialized heathcare should be on a provincial/state level in order to be more effective.
4/19/2006 12:36:14 AM
^^^^I am talking about factoring for race, meaning comparing the countries as if racial proportions were the same.^^^I'm gonna play the race card Believe it or not, hispanics have a lower infant mortality rate than whites in the US. The statistics show that race plays a clear factor in infant mortality rates. If you compare hispanics to hispanics, the US has a lower rate. Which is surprising considering the high rate of uninsured hispanic immigrants in this country.from here http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5115a4.htm[Edited on April 19, 2006 at 12:45 AM. Reason : 2]
4/19/2006 12:44:40 AM
we get it. you hate black people.
4/19/2006 12:46:06 AM
4/19/2006 1:04:35 AM
^the statistics are way too correlated to be the result of socioeconomic differences between races. If that were the case, then hispanic infant mortality rates should logically fall a lot closer to black rates.^^aharight. I guess its predictable that I'd be called a racist for pointing out obvious, documented racial differences. But the statistics don't lie, and as I stated before, men have a significantly shorter life expectancy than women within every demographic, rich or poor, insured or uninsured. The same is true for blacks versus whites. And this is true for any large random sample of people in any country. Therefore it is obvious that the higher proportion of blacks in America versus Canada skews the data. Its called Simpson's paradox. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, then try a google search.Prove me wrong. I'm begging you. Otherwise your "racism" accusations hold no merit at all.[Edited on April 19, 2006 at 1:08 AM. Reason : 2]
4/19/2006 1:05:37 AM
4/19/2006 1:10:18 AM
i looked at that study, and the one that it cited that sought to control for socio-economic status by only looking at college graduates, and neither seemed to control for income levels or anything else. just controlling for whether or not the person is a college graduate does not control for income disparity between the races.both studies talked about low birth weights. from unicef:In the industrialized world, cigarette smoking during pregnancy is the leading cause of low birthweight.In the developing world, low birthweight stems primarily from the mother's poor health and nutrition. Three factors have most impact: the mother's poor nutritional status before conception, short stature (due mostly to undernutrition and infections during her childhood), and poor nutrition during the pregnancy. more blacks smoke cigarettes. there is economic disparities between races, even among college graduates. that blacks have higher levels of infant mortality does not mean that race is the cause of this.
4/19/2006 1:25:04 AM
4/19/2006 1:26:12 AM
U.S. mortality rates among infants, by race/ethnicity of mother, from 1980 to 2001 (line graph): Deaths per 1,000 live births, 2001—Black, 14.2; White, 5.7; All races*, 6.9. Trends have decreased dramatically among all groups.so in 2001 in america whites had an infant mortality rate of 5.7 per 1000, and in 2000 all canadians had a rate of 5.1.ITS NOT RACE.
4/19/2006 1:27:35 AM
From source 8 of the article you cited:they measured segregation levels, economic disparity and infant mortality rates of blacks and whites in 38 cities.guess what, the segregation index showed independent correlation with infant mortality rates. there was almost no correlation between amount of houses headed by females.there was however almost perfect correlation between segregation index and infant mortality. and a high level of correlation between economic disparity and infant mortality.the authors were unwilling to say there was causation, but to say that blacks have higher levels of infant mortality because they are black is idiotic.
4/19/2006 1:39:29 AM
4/19/2006 1:54:47 AM
If I recall, black women are also MUCH more likely to use drugs during pregnancy.
4/19/2006 1:58:08 AM