The Rise Of Predator Economics And The Fall Of Good Governance
The Rise Of Predator Economics And The Fall Of Good
Governance
Written By Mark Taliano
If the definition of good governance includes the sound
management of public monies and resources, then Canada has very bad governance.
The manufactured health care crisis is a case in point.Solutions to challenges of cost, quality, and
access are fairly straightforward but wilfully ignored, and current
trajectories towards corporatization
are leading us in the wrong direction.
If the challenges are responsibly addressed, every Canadian
will have access to exemplary health care, based on need rather than ability to
pay.Additionally, Canadians will save
money, and the economy will be positively impacted.
Dr. Danielle Martin -- family physician, V.P of Medical
Affairs and Health Systems Solutions at Women’s College Hospital, and Assistant
Professor in Medicine and Health Policy at the University of Toronto -- is
eminently qualified to offer solutions.
She argues that we could
immediately implement “Three Big Ideas” within an expanded medicare system.
Martin describes these ideas as follows:
*
“20 Drugs To Save A Nation”
*
“Less is More”
*
“Sick With Poverty”
The first idea, “20 drugs To Save A Nation” would save
lives, and improve the economy.
Currently, one
in ten Canadians can not afford their prescription medications.
Consequently, their medical conditions often worsen, which
invariably leads to more expensive care, including hospital admissions. A study by the New England Journal Of
Medicine, appropriately titled "Dead Man
Walking" , shows that when heart attack patients fail to adhere to
their prescriptions, they are more likely to be readmitted to hospital.
National public drug coverage also saves lives.As Alan Cassels explains in "Opinion: A
prescription for cutting costs" , public drug plans screen drugs for
value and safety better than their private drug plan counterparts. He explains,
“ … out of the top 50 most costly drugs covered by private drug plans, several
of them wouldn’t merit coverage by public drug plans because of their poor
value: they were branded drugs which had cheaper equivalent generics.”
The tragedy of Vioxx resonates with this opinion: premature
release of the brand drug Vioxx caused between 4,000
- 7,000 deaths in Canada.
Bulk buying through a public drug plan also means that one
purchaser (versus many) can secure lower prices for medications. New Zealand,
for example, pays 2.4 cents for one Lipitor pill, while Canada pays 32
cents for the same pill.
A national pharmacare program with first dollar coverage (a
best case scenario) would save Canada as much as $10.7
billion per year.
Dr. Martin’s “20 Drugs To Save A Nation” plan would be a first
step towards national pharmacare.She
argues convincingly that we could start bulk-buying 20 generic drugs, and that
such a step would not only improve patient-adherence
rates to medications – and their health --- but it would save a substantial
amount of money.
The next idea, “Less Is More”, would also save money, and
lives.According to Martin, numerous
medical tests, treatments, and procedures are administered more often than
necessary. Consequently, health outcomes can be negatively impacted, and
additional costs accrued.A sobering
study by Dr. Ray Sahelian reinforces the message.He notes that “Radiation from CT scans done
in 2007 will cause 29,000 cancers and kill nearly 15,000 Americans.”
The top five tests, treatments, and procedures that are done
more often than necessary are:
The final big idea, “Sick With Poverty” explains that
poverty is basically a disease. The corollary of this is that if poverty can be
eliminated --- and 1 in 7 Canadian children live in poverty --- then we will be
a much healthier (and productive) society.
A 2013 study by the Canadian Medical Association, “Health
Care In Canada.What Makes Us Sick?”
identifies four social determinants of health:
*
income
*
housing
*
nutrition and food security
*
early childhood development
Canada’s failure to understand this aggravates and
perpetuates an unnecessary situation – poverty.If all Canadians had adequate income, housing, nutrition/ food security,
as well as early childhood education, our population would be healthier,
societal costs for health care, policing, and other social services would be
reduced, and we would collectively be more productive.
Evidence shows that Canada would save $7.6 billion per
year on reduced health care costs alone if the lowest group of earners moved up
by one “quintile” (to two) on a scale of earnings with the top quintile being
five.
This could be financed by discarding Canada’s current
welfare system and replacing it with a Guaranteed
Annual Incomesystem which would
redistribute monies through taxes.
Clearly, we have the tools and the funds to make Canada a
better and stronger nation, but it won’t happen until the current theology of
predatory economics that is poisoning the economy, and our collective mindset,
is rejected.
Instituting Dr. Martin’s “Three Big Ideas” would be a huge
step in the right direction.
Written By Mark Taliano
________________________________
The Straight Goods
Cheers Eyes Wide Open
2 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Read my family's shocking true story to see that Canadians are at very serious risk, including their health and well-being, as a result of the mega private corporation that has taken over our government, as the substantial evidence I have posted on this website proves...
2 comments:
Read my family's shocking true story to see that Canadians are at very serious risk, including their health and well-being, as a result of the mega private corporation that has taken over our government, as the substantial evidence I have posted on this website proves...
http://www.thekellymarierichardcase.com/
Makes total sense to me, kinda like it takes money to make money.
Jean
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