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From: Laura Boylan [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 2 avril 2009 00:03
To: Laura Boylan
Subject: Did Canadian Healthcare Kill Natasha Richardson??!!


Thank you to all I communicated with who helped me in writing this piece,
particularly to my Canadian colleagues.  I am grateful for your input and
suggestions.  This will soon be posted on the Physicians for a National
Health Program blog and I encourage you to use, quote, or distribute as you
are moved to do!  Thanks et merci!


Did Canadian Healthcare Kill Natasha Richardson??!!  

In an example of the circus of fear and hyperbole surrounding the health
care debate, opponents of government involvement in health care are
exploiting Natasha Richardson's tragic death from a skiing accident.  The
New York Post reports "Canadacare May Have Killed Natasha.". The blogosphere
has headlines like "Canada's Killer Healthcare".  Here are the bare facts:
Natasha Richardson died from an epidural hematoma, a condition that requires
urgent evaluation and surgical treatment.  When treated early enough, this
injury is rarely fatal.   It is, therefore, reasonable to ask how different
health care systems handle this sort of emergency.  

Ms. Richardson initial refusal of an ambulance cost about two hours.  With
20/20 hindsight we know this was a bad decision.  However, it's also true
that "feeling okay" after a minor head injury is, in fact, a powerful
predictor of a good outcome.  But bad things do happen.   Patients with an
epidural hematoma may initially feel and look well, this is referred to as a
"lucid interval."  After the ambulance was summoned for a second time, only
three hours and forty minutes elapsed before Ms. Richardson arrived at a
neurotrauma center in Montreal.  On the way she was evaluated and stabilized
at a community hospital with modern imaging facilities.   Apparently,
however, it was still too late.  

Many have asserted that Ms. Richardson would have fared better in the United
States.  This is far from certain.  With epidural hematomas, it's all in the
timing.  The intervention required is one of the simplest in neurosurgery.
Helicopter airlift, or the lack thereof, has been a focus of criticism of
Ms. Richardson's care.   An immediately available helicopter might have
helped Ms. Richardson if used to transfer her directly from the resort to
Montreal.  It's hard to know.  However, it does not follow that the
profusion of medical helicopter services in the United States makes
Americans safer. 

As reported by the Institute of Medicine, neurosurgeons are often
unavailable to provide emergency and trauma care in the US.   Detailed data
on patients referred to specialty hospitals for emergency neurosurgical
evaluations is available for Cook County, Illinois.  This county, which
includes Chicago, is densely populated.  Total time elapsed from arrival to
a community hospital to arrival at the specialty hospital averaged 11 hours.
The comparable time period for Ms. Richardson, who had an accident in rural
Quebec, was less than 3 hours.   In Cook County most patients would still be
awaiting an imaging study at the first hospital.  

 The Austin American-Statesman reported in 2002 that a man with a vertebral
fracture after a fall waited 8 hours in an Austin emergency room before
being airlifted to Temple because no local neurosurgeon was available.  In
Temple he waited two days for surgery and was eventually billed over $4,000
for the helicopter.  In the end, it turned out that there had, in fact, been
a neurosurgeon available in Austin, however he worked at a hospital in a
competing network.   This is just one case, but it does illustrate how
business incentives distort quality in our healthcare system.

US helicopter medical evacuation services are extensive, but tend to address
market rather than public health imperatives.   Helicopters are concentrated
in urban rather than rural areas.   Alarming fatality rates due to accidents
during medical helicopter evacuations have led to headlines such as in
"Critics Say Emergency Medical Helicopters Are Overused and Offer Few
Benefits to Patients" (Wall Street Journal 2005).  

It's different in Canada.  In Quebec, while there is no helicopter service
there is a fixed wing air ambulance service..  Fixed wing craft require a
landing strip but are much faster.  In addition to being used for long
distance emergencies in this vast province, several times a week, Quebeckers
from remote regions are flown to the city to obtain non-emergency medical
care not available locally.  All of this is free to patients, who are
covered by Canadian Medicare.  Other provinces do have helicopter evacuation
services, and these have a better safety record than their US counterparts.

A really good emergency medical system addresses the continuum of care from
prevention to pre-hospital care to rehabilitation.  Nova Scotia, a
not-wealthy largely rural Canadian province, has created a model program of
integrated services, which others have aimed to reproduce.  Dr. Ronald
Stewart, who championed the program first as a legislator and then as
Minister of Health engineered the replacement of fragmented private services
with a unified public system in the 90s.  Innovation has thrived with a
profusion of influential research papers on, for example, medically
appropriate helicopter triage, head injury treatment guidelines, and
detailed reports of clinical characteristics and outcomes of all surgical
interventions on injuries of the sort Ms. Richardson had.  The average wait
time for neurosurgical emergency treatment in Nova Scotia, by the way, is
less than in Cook County.   

I have worked for years in a variety of different sorts of US healthcare
facilities including inner city hospitals, private academic referral
centers, rural community hospitals and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
A uniform truth, alas, is that financial incentives play a major role in who
gets what care and when.  We have scarcity in the midst of excess, to the
detriment of patients on both receiving ends.  If you are uninsured and
socially undesirable you can die in Manhattan from an epidural hematoma,
despite rapid arrival to an emergency room and what must surely be one of
the world's densest concentrations of medical subspecialty care.  I've seen
it.  Trauma patients are disproportionately uninsured and are considered a
high medicolegal liability risk.  Our entire emergency care system is
overwhelmed, in large part, due to lack of universal access to other health
care.  As a result, all Americans are left to rely on a distorted emergency
system.  When it comes to effective clinical emergency care we should
emulate Canada's single payer system, not congratulate ourselves on
helicopter availability in Aspen.


Hyperlinks to information sources:
Institute of Medicine, 2006.
<http://www.iom.edu/CMS/3809/16107/35007/35040.aspx> Key Findings and
Recommendations from the series of reports on the Future of Emergency Care
in the U.S. 
Austin American-Statesman. Neurosurgeons in short supply
<http://www.statesman.com/specialreports/content/specialreports/healthcare/0
519neurosurgeons.html> , 5/19/2002.  
Neurosurgery. 2008 Mar;62(3):709-16.  Neurosurgical emergency transfers to
academic centers in Cook  <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18425017>
County: a prospective multicenter study.
 <http://goog_1238588623407/> Air Ambulances Are Under Fire; Critics Say
Emergency Medical Helicopters Are Overused and Offer Few Benefits to
Patients .
<http://proquest.umi.com/pqdlink?did=801837211&sid=5&Fmt=3&clientId=83650&RQ
T=309&VName=PQD&cfc=1>   Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York,
N.Y.: Mar 3, 2005. pg. D.1 
Air Ambulance Services in Quebec, provincial government website
<http://www.msg.gouv.qc.ca/en/aerien/mission/evacuation.asp> .  
Emergency Service System in Nova Scotia, provincial government website
<http://www.gov.ns.ca/ehs/> 

best regards,

Laura S. Boylan, MD
Clinical Associate Professor of Neurology
New York University School of Medicine
Department of Veterans Affairs
NY Harbor Healthcare System
http://www.med.nyu.edu/people/boylal01.html
212-865-0057



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