I am always negotiating the American healthcare system. It is infuriating. Now I am helping Leah with medical issues, trying to get her into a cardiologist. I called Northwestern in Chicago. First available: January.
Americans get angry about gas prices, but not this. That’s like obsessing over a leaky faucet while a tornado hits your house.
Ten points about universal healthcare:
1. Universal healthcare systems commonly do make you wait in some non-emergency situations. Oh … and where they also make you wait is called the United States.
2. An MRI in the US costs around $1,200. In Japan it costs $95. And chances are your MRI machine was made in Japan (or Germany).
3. Universal healthcare is not socialism. Children riding the bus to school is socialism? Nope. Germany and France (and a long list of countries that have universal healthcare—see point 5) are market economies. Are Medicare and the VA socialism?
4. Government is inefficient? One of the contributing factors to healthcare costing the United States 19 percent of GDP is corporate inefficiency. The United States has a GDP of $20 trillion. France has a GDP of around $3 trillion and spends about 11 percent of GDP on healthcare. As for corporate efficiency, called customer service lately?
5. These countries have universal healthcare: Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Belgium, Brunei, Canada, Cyprus, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Singapore, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Arab Emirates, and the UK.
6. Canadians love their healthcare; approval among Canadians is well into the 80s. Do a few come here? Yes, many for cosmetic purposes.
7. According to a Yale study, universal healthcare would annually save $450 billion and prevent nearly 70,000 deaths a year.
8. We are not broke. We have a Treasury Department and the world’s largest economy (see point 4). I don’t feel like explaining this one. It’s stupid with two O’s.
9. Universal healthcare has mainstream support. According to Pew: “Most Americans (66 percent) say the federal government has a responsibility to make sure all Americans have health care coverage.”
10. Number of Americans who declare bankruptcy a year due to medical bills: 700,000. Number of people in Germany and Japan who declare bankruptcy a year due to medical bills: zero.
PHOTO: The Greek god of medicine Asclepius and his ... um, rod.