Here's another perspective on UHC from our former landlords across the pond:
http://www.heritage.org/Research/HealthCare/bg2239.cfm
This doctor seems to think the NHS is in worse shape than Amy Winehouse.
I'm just wondering if the are any lies, cherry pickings, or misrepresentations in this critique of the UHC systems in Europe and in general. I also thought the Stossel thread was getting a little long.
OK, sorry to take so long. I did skim it earlier, but I needed to read it more slowly to make sure I wasn't missing anything. (When there's so little of substance, you tend to assume you've missed something....)
As Architect noted, the author is not a doctor. She is in fact a nurse. A nurse with a lot of opinions, it seems. Her personality comes over remarkably clearly in that and the other article, but I won't turn this into a psychological ad-hom, tempting though that may be. In addition, she has not, in that article, as far as I can see, said anything even remotely resembling "bugger-off to the NHS".
Put simply, she doesn't like
NICE. She doesn't like any way to assess the cost-effectiveness of medical treatment. She thinks patients should get any treatment they want (that is recommended by their doctor), without anyone being able to say "no, a 1 in 1000 chance that you might live an extra week is not worth £100,000" (or words to that effect).
She wants the "free market" to be the only regulator. Which of course it is in cases where the patient is paying for all his treatment out of his own pocket. However, where insurance companies come in, and even more so where public funds are paying, somebody
has to look at value for money. Thus, various measures have been devised (such as the
QALY) to try to quantify the benefit conferred by a particular treatment. Healthcare providers look at these measures to help decide whether the latest wonder drug is good value for their clients.
Opinionated Nurse Lady doesn't like this. She thinks the QALY is pseudoscience (dearie me, whay am I not surprised that someone - probably in the Humanities - has given her a PhD for this drivel....) She believes the free market should sort it out. I think, she believes that insurance companies should be able to compete on what they will or won't cover (as I think they do at the moment anyway). She's not really very clear on that, especially on how it might be possible for clients to be properly informed about any decisions they make in that area.
Opinionated Nurse Lady believes that any attempt to apply cost-effectiveness criteria to medical interventions is "rationing", just these evil socialists who promised the proletariat "free" healthcare ratting on their solemn promise when they realise that some of the proletariat really might be demanding £100,000 spent on them for a 1 in 1,000 chance of an extra week of life.
That's actually the beginning and the end of that entire rant. She doesn't like rationing, she doesn't like anyone looking at the cost-effectiveness of medical treatment, and she really doesn't like NICE.
It appears that Barack Obama, keenly conscious of the fact that the USA spends a greater proportion of its GDP on government-funded health provision than Britain does (yes, she got that, something we got such a shock over when we found out), is considering setting up something like NICE in the US.
Through major entitlement and welfare programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, which contribute to rapidly growing American health care costs, government takes a historically higher proportion of gross domestic product than does even the British NHS.
Just for the record. In case anyone was still in any doubt about that.
Obama may even be thinking of legislating to require insurance companies to be bound by these cost-effectiveness criteria when authorising treatment.
Oooh scary!!
The end of the rant is simply a loud "don't do it!"
Lots of people have a beef with NICE. The decisions aren't always as obviously rational as one would hope. A number of its decisions have been overturned after public campaigns. It's too political.
However, I think it's difficult not to argue that where any finite communal pot of money is concerned, whether it be public funds or an insurance fund, there should be some consideration of cost-benefit, especially when extremely expensive procedures or drugs are concerned.
Opinionated Nurse Lady with a PhD in right-wing pontificating on healthcare markets thinks otherwise. That's all that article says. I wonder who's paying her to say it?
I would really like to know her opinion on healthcare in Britain. especially whether she wants to abolish the NHS, put healthcare back into the private sector, and operate a publicly-funded ghetto for the underprivileged. And if she does, I'd like to see how many votes she'd get.
I also bear in mind that these two videos were on her own web site. The woman with Cushing's syndrome being presented as a brain tumour patient who needed (and was denied) immediate surgery, and the talking neckless head just - talking.
If that's the best she can do, she and Stossel would make a lovely couple.
Rolfe.
PS. There's one statement she makes that could do with highlighting.
The intellectual roots of effectiveness research can be traced back to mid-18th century Scotland and the "arithmetical medicine" practised by the graduates of the Edinburgh medical school. It was there that James Lind famously undertook a controlled trial of six separate treatments for scurvy.
Yayyyy! Scotland invented Evidence Based Medicine!