Should Canada’s health insurance system be a model for the United States?

Most rich democracies provide citizens universal coverage for medical services—but not in the United States, where tens of millions of people remain without health insurance and costs far exceed spending in any other country.

Aerial view of Case Western Reserve University campus in Cleveland, Ohio with the sculptural Peter B. Lewis Building by Frank Gehry, 2002 visible in the centre. CWRU

Case Western Reserve University, Newswise 15 August 2018

Many advocates have argued the U.S. should emulate Canada’s “Medicare-for-all” or “single-payer” system, especially given the many similarities between the two countries. Yet few nations other than Canada have systems in which governments serve as the primary insurer for citizens; in many, governments structure a system of private non-profit insurance.

Joe White, the Luxenberg Family Professor of Public Policy at Case Western Reserve University, discusses Canada’s experience and its relevance to the U.S. in a new article published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

White was invited to comment on a research article in the same issue by Canadian health-care scholars, which identified ways that Canada’s system could be improved. White addresses these issues, their direct lessons for the US and explores the question: Do Canada’s imperfections show that the Medicare-for-all approach would not work in the US?

Canada’s health care: a coming attraction?

White is the author of Competing Solutions: American Health Care Proposals and International Experience (Brookings Institution, 1995) and many research articles comparing the United States health care system to other countries. He notes that both he and the Canadian authors agree that Canada’s track record over the past half century is better than America’s in many ways, especially access to and cost of care. This is especially important because the systems were very similar until the 1960’s.

Yet, the Canadian system is not perfect. For instance, while Canada has universal coverage for medically necessary physician and hospital services, pharmaceutical benefits work through a mix of employer-sponsored insurance and special programs for the poor and the elderly, much like in the US.

Canada’s system is more fiscally constrained than the systems in other countries that, unlike Canada, have special tax or social insurance revenue dedicated to health care.

Canadian health care financing is also caught in conflict between the national and provincial governments. These weaknesses, however, are not related to the single-payer approach.

The Canadian authors worry that Canada has not gone far in implementing electronic health records, pay-for-performance systems and other measures widely touted as ways to improve efficiency. Based on his own research, White explains that this does not seem a serious flaw, since there is little evidence that these measures match the promises.

His bottom line is that “Americans should neither reject nor accept some version of Canada’s so-called Medicare-for-all or single-payer system separate from much broader decisions about financing, benefits, and the roles of the national and state governments.”

White spent the first half of 2018 on sabbatical from Case Western Reserve, teaching at Institut d’études politiques de Lyon, France, and as a visiting scholar at the Erasmus University School of Health Policy and Management in the Netherlands.
White is available for commentary and media requests by contacting Daniel Robison, CWRU. Interviews can be arranged at an on-campus television studio, in-person, or by phone.

Source Newswise

  References

Drawing Lessons From Canada’s Experience With Single-Payer Health Insurance, White J. JAMA Intern Med. 2018 Sep 1;178(9):1255-1257. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2018.3707.

Lessons From the Canadian Experience With Single-Payer Health Insurance: Just Comfortable Enough With the Status Quo, Ivers N, Brown AD, Detsky AS. JAMA Intern Med. 2018 Sep 1;178(9):1250-1255. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2018.3568.

  Further reading

How Single-payer Stacks Up: Evaluating Different Models of Universal Health Coverage on Cost, Access, and Quality, Fox A, Poirier R. Int J Health Serv. 2018 Jul;48(3):568-585. doi: 10.1177/0020731418779377. Epub 2018 Jun 21.

What can the Canadians and Americans learn from each other’s health care systems? Weil TP. Int J Health Plann Manage. 2016 Jul;31(3):349-70. doi: 10.1002/hpm.2374. Epub 2016 Jul 29.

Universal access in Canada. Questions of equity remain, Wolfe S, Badgley RF. Health PAC Bull. 1992 Fall;22(3):29-35.

Also see
Q&A: Is the United States Moving Towards Single Payer Health Care? Newswise
Physician Practices in U.S. Spend Nearly Four Times What Canadian Practices Spend Newswise
Health Care Reform: No Revolution in Sight Newswise
Lessons from other countries on how to improve U.S. healthcare Robert Pearl MD

Call 403-240-9100
Mobility Menu
   403-240-9100

follow us in feedly