The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care | David Gratzer | Evidence versus anecdotes
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The Cure: How Capi...
The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care
David Gratzer
Encounter Books
, 2008 - 250 pages
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based on 7 reviews
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Drawing on personal experience in both the
Can
adian and U.S. systems, Dr. Gratzer s
how
s how paternalistic government involvement in the
health
care
system has multiplied inefficiencies, discouraged innovation, and punished patients. The
Cure
offers a detailed and practical approach to putting individuals back in charge. With an introduction by Milton Friedman, The Cure will be required reading for anyone who wants to know what is really wrong with the modern health care system.
The perfect antidote to Moore's Sicko propaganda
Let me state now that NO ONE is denying that
health
care
in the United States is messed up right now, and is facing some SERIOUS issues. Even the most conservative Republi
can
knows this full well and good. This is not even the issue. The real issue should be: would socializing things make our problems better or worse?
Michael Moore, in Sicko, touts Canada's socialized healthcare system, even calling it "free." (It's not free. The government also does not "pay" for it because the government does NOT have any money. Taxpayers pay for it.) Moore is of course conveniently ignoring many well-known facts. The author of
Cure
was a Doctor in Canada, and saw first-hand the problem with socialized medicine. His book demonstrates that it's not all that it's cracked up to be. Sorry Hillary.
In England and Canada, if you go to the doctor or the hospital, you won't get a bill. Yeah that's great. But the problem that has emerged is that it takes SO LONG to even get in for certain types of treatment that people are DYING OF EASILY TREATABLE ILLNESSES THERE. In England this has gotten SO BAD that more people are dying a year of treatable cancer than from automobile accidents!!! Yes, that's right. The cancer WAS treatable, but by the time they actually get in for treatment, it has advanced to the stage that it no longer is treatable, and the patient dies.
So, if the healthcare in Canada is SO WONDERFUL, then why are so many Canadians flooding our Northern hospitals every year? They come across the border for an appointment they can get right away, when in their own country they would have to wait nine months to a year for treatment. As s
how
n on 20/20, dogs and cats that need surgery in Canada get it faster than humans!
By the way, if you get strep throat and have to wait a month to even get in to see a general practitioner (which is about the typical wait for GPs in Canada), then what's even the point? You'll be better by the time you get in! So, depending on whether what you have is life-threatening or not, YOU'LL MAY EITHER BE BETTER OR UNCURABLE BY THE TIME YOU EVEN SEE A DOCTOR! Who cares if it's "free"? As the Canadian woman on the September 14th episode of 20/20 said who had to come to America for a life-saving surgery that the Canadian system classified as "elective surgery" (whereas the
American
doctor gave her only a couple weeks to live), "Who cares if they make a profit (in America), I'm alive!"
The wait to see dentists in England is so bad that people are now performing home dentistry. We're not talking teeth cleaning here, but people pulling their own teeth out instead of having professional work done! Lines to get into the dentist in England look like the lines did at the local theater on the opening night of Star Wars Episode III. No thank you!
By the way, if the government-run medical system in Canada is so great, then why does a private clinic now open in Canada EVERY WEEK, on average, even though such clinics ARE ILLEGAL? Furthermore, if these private clinics are illegal in Canada (and they are), then why does the Canadian government do nothing to stop them? BECAUSE THE CANADIAN GOVERNMENT KNOWS IT NEEDS THEM, THAT ITS HEALTHCARE SYSTEM IS CRUMBLING, THAT'S WHY. The prime minister of Canada recently suggested that their socialized healthcare system is on the brink of collapse, and Americans are scurrying to emulate it!
This book is a much-needed reality check after the overlong season of uncritical love surrounding Moore's obscurantist propaganda documentary. In fact, it's too bad this book isn't a documentary itself; it could then act as a more effective counterweight.
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Evidence versus anecdotes
David Gratzer, being a licensed physician in
Can
ada and the US, is a credible critic of proponents of socialized medicine. He does an excellent job of providing data to support his points, and most of his points are that people supporting the concept of a single payer for
health
care
use anecdotes rather than convincing data to s
how
how the US health system is failing. He uses hard endpoint data, such as diagnosis of breast cancer in early stages, cancer survival data, and survival after heart attacks, to show that health care in the US leads other countries in the world and espcially those with single payer systems run by the government. He makes the point that being "politically correct" doesn't necessarily make one "scientifically correct". The way he criticizes the mind-set of socialized medicine reminded me of the methods used by Thomas Sowell in his 1995 book, "The Vision of the Anointed". He pointed out that most of the "policially correct" set ignore factual evidence. Gratzer finds these arguments and provides the evidence that is often ignored. This should be a must read for those in positions to influence the debate.
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Because Everyone Seems to Need The Cure
The only moral and practical solution to the
health
care
"crisis" in the United States is to allow the industry to become so profitable that productive geniuses such as Thomas Edison and Bill Gates will work long hours to deliver the best quality health care at affordable prices.
This book lucidly identifies
how
nearly every problem with the current health care system in the United States stems from too much regulation (although there are isolated cases of fraud.) From reading this book, you will learn, amongst other things:
* The serious error underlying using statistics on health to evaluate the quality of a health care system.
* How health insurance became employer based in the United States.
* The problem with various insurance mandates including: benefit mandates, guaranteed issue mandates, guaranteed renewability mandates and community rating mandates.
* How EMTALA, which prevents hospitals from denying patients emergency medical care, inevitably leads to less hospitals in the long run.
* The detrimental results of President Nixon's HMO Act of 1973.
In addition to identifying many problems, this book offers several market-based solutions. These include extensive calls for specific deregulations, removing price controls and pushing for more Health Savings Accounts. The author also spends a considerable amount of time comparing the U.S.' current health care system to those of various other countries, including but not limited to
Can
ada, Great Britain, Germany, South Africa, Australia and Sweden.
If you appreciate laissez-faire economics and you are concerned about health care in the United States, then this is the book for you!
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