Why the U.S. Ranks Low on WHO's Health-Care Study
By John Stossel
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
The New York Times
recently declared "the disturbing truth ... that ... the United States
is a laggard not a leader in providing good medical care."
As usual, the Times editors get it wrong.
They find evidence in a 2000 World Health Organization (WHO) rating
of 191 nations and a Commonwealth Fund study of wealthy nations
published last May. In the WHO rankings,
the United States finished 37th, behind nations like Morocco, Cyprus
and Costa Rica. Finishing first and second were France and Italy.
Michael Moore makes much of this in his movie "Sicko."
The Commonwealth Fund
looked at Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, the United Kingdom
and the United States -- and ranked the U.S. last or next to last on
all but one criterion.
So the verdict is in. The vaunted U.S. medical system is one of the worst.
But there's less to these studies than meets the eye. They
measure something other than quality of medical care. So saying that
the U.S. finished behind those other countries is misleading. First let's acknowledge that the U.S. medical system has serious problems. But the problems stem from departures
from free-market principles. The system is riddled with tax
manipulation, costly insurance mandates and bureaucratic interference.
Most important, six out of seven health-care dollars are spent by third
parties, which means that most consumers exercise no
cost-consciousness. As Milton Friedman always pointed out, no one
spends other people's money as carefully as he spends his own. Even with all that, it strains credulity to hear that the
U.S. ranks far from the top. Sick people come to the United States for
treatment. When was the last time you heard of someone leaving this
country to get medical care? The last famous case I can remember is
Rock Hudson, who went to France in the 1980s to seek treatment for
AIDS.
So what's wrong with the WHO and Commonwealth Fund studies? Let me count the ways.
The WHO judged a country's quality of health on life
expectancy. But that's a lousy measure of a health-care system. Many
things that cause premature death have nothing do with medical care. We
have far more fatal transportation accidents than other countries.
That's not a health-care problem.
Similarly, our homicide rate is 10 times higher than in the
U.K., eight times higher than in France, and five times greater than in
Canada. When you adjust for these "fatal injury" rates, U.S. life
expectancy is actually higher than in nearly every other industrialized
nation.
Diet and lack of exercise also bring down average life expectancy.
Another reason the U.S. didn't score high in the WHO rankings
is that we are less socialistic than other nations. What has that got
to do with the quality of health care? For the authors of the study,
it's crucial. The WHO judged countries not on the absolute quality of
health care, but on how "fairly" health care of any quality is
"distributed." The problem here is obvious. By that criterion, a
country with high-quality care overall but "unequal distribution" would
rank below a country with lower quality care but equal distribution. It's when this so-called "fairness," a highly subjective standard, is factored in that the U.S. scores go south.
The U.S. ranking is influenced heavily by the number of people
-- 45 million -- without medical insurance. As I reported in previous
columns, our government aggravates that problem by making insurance
artificially expensive with, for example, mandates for coverage that
many people would not choose and forbidding us to buy policies from
companies in another state. Even with these interventions, the 45 million figure is
misleading. Thirty-seven percent of that group live in households
making more than $50,000 a year, says the U.S. Census Bureau. Nineteen
percent are in households making more than $75,000 a year; 20 percent
are not citizens, and 33 percent are eligible for existing government
programs but are not enrolled. For all its problems, the U.S. ranks at the top for quality
of care and innovation, including development of life-saving drugs. It
"falters" only when the criterion is proximity to socialized medicine.
Dr.
Jaime Davis, surgeon and member of the foreign affairs department of
Cuba's health ministry, speaks during an interview with Reuters in
Havana July 16, 2007. Davis said that Michael Moore's controversial
documentary "SiCKO" has given Cuba's free health system the best
publicity since its 1959 revolution. REUTERS/Enrique De La Osa (CUBA)
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