August 17, 2007
Canada's 'universal' health care
Thomas Lifson
We finally have good operating understanding of "universal" health
care: somewhere in the universe there may be a place for you to get
treatment. And if you are lucky enough to live near the United States
before Hillary Care II takes hold, you may even get treated.


Canada welcomes the birth of the newest set of quadruplets born to
proud Canadian parents. Karen and J.P. Jepp. However, the Jepp quads
will be eligible to run for the presidency of the United States when
they reach the age of 35, having been born in Benefis Hospital in
Great Falls, Montana, 325 miles from their home in Calgary, capital of
the Canadian oil industry.


The precious gift of American citizenship comes to the Jepp Quads
because there were no hospital facilities anywhere in Canada able to
handle 4 neonatal intensive care babies. Not in Calgary, a city of
over a million people, the wealthiest in Canada, or anywhere else in
Canada.  Local officials looked.

However, Great Falls, a city of well under one hundred thousand
people, apparently had no problem with unusual demand for such
facilities.


As Don Surber points out, the United States functions as Canada's
back-up medical system, enabling it to run with less investment in
facilities. America's evil, heartless private medical care system
saved the day. In any capital-intensive field, whether it be electric
power generation or medicine, gearing up for peak demand costs a lot
of money. California discovered this a few years ago when it started
to experience rolling blackouts in the wake of bungled partial
deregulation of power.


America spends significantly more on medical care than Canada.
Socialized medicine advocates frequently claim that this shows we are
getting a bad deal: less care for more money. But the fact is that
illegal alien mothers walk into hospital emergency rooms and give
birth to babies requiring intensive neonatal care costing hundreds of
thousands of dollars on a regular basis, and it makes no headlines. We
do not send them over the border to Canada or Mexico and use their
medical systems as a back-up, even when the mother might be a citizen
of that country. We treat them, and pick-up the bill, too, without so
much as a citizenship check or a call to immigration officials.


Steven M. Warshawsky demonstrates today on AT that there is no such
thing as "free" medical care. Having the government pay means having
other people pay your medical bills, and that leads to endless demand,
which leads to rationing, which leads to insufficient capacity to
handle peak demands, like, say, the birth of quadruplets.


If and when Hillary Care II comes, of course there will be no back-up
capacity available for Americans (unless you believe Michael Moore and
think Cuba's medical system can provide anything to anyone).


Canada's vaunted socialized medical system depends on America for more
than peak capacity back-up, of course. When was the last time you
heard about a new drug being developed by a Canadian pharmaceutical
company? Under the price control system in Canada it makes no sense to
develop drugs there. Canada lets the United States bear the major
burden of drug development (and so does the rest of the world). Our
high drug prices and federal research subsidize the world's medical
R&D.


Hat tip: Larwyn

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