The Right Book at the Right Time ...
I am astonished that there are only twelve reviews before mine, given that health care reform is at the forefront of our national conversation, and that T.R. Reid's careful presentation dispels so many half-truths and outright lies.
As a retired physician, this book fascinated me. Over the 50 years I spent as a doctor, I worked under socialized medicine (the VA, the Indian Health Service and the National Institutes of Health), in our private and academic sectors, in a Medicare-only practice, and travelled and observed in a Third World country (Paraguay).
T.R. Reid paints a clear picture. We do *not* have the best system in the world. Some things are good about it, and yes, sheiks and kings come to the U.S. for health care; but what good is that if 47 million of our own citizens cannot afford health care in their own country?
My wife and I were in Washington in October to lobby for health care reform. We met with our Congressman's senior staff member. She'd not heard of Reid's book, so in follow-up we sent her a copy. It didn't change our Congressman's vote, but if he reads it he'll be better informed.
How is it possible that the average Japanese can afford to visit his doctor 13 times in a year, or how is it that a CT or an MRI costs on-tenth there as it would in the U.S.?
How can hundreds of private insurers in Switzerland stay in business, challenged by a public, government-run plan?
How is it that Germans have had health care since the Emperor set up their system 100 years ago, while so many Americans go without today?
Why is it that primary care doctors do better in England than they do here in the U.S?
Why is it that Canadians believe in fairness so much more than we U.S. citizens? Is it because we are morally deficient? (my question).
The deficiencies in the healthcare systems in other wealthy, democratic societies are correctable. Just think of what they could do with what we spend today ... about twice what they spend, and we get less for it!
Reid's observations make me wonder ... Does our faith in unconstrained, unregulated free-market capitalism trump our concern for our fellow human beings?
Perhaps his most timely message is that none of the countries he surveyed is completely satisfied with its solution to its health care needs. In France, despite its incredibly successful system, there are strikes and complaints. In Canada there are lines, although emergencies are seen promptly. I suspect that even if the Senate bill goes forward, we'll be tinkering with health care legislation for generations.
How is it that we can barely muster enough votes to debate these and related issues in Congress, despite the fact that each and every one of us is in jeopardy of losing our right to health care? We are only a single potentially lethal diagnosis away from denial of coverage. The Sword of Damocles is wielded by United Healthcare.
How is it that nearly two thirds of bankruptcies are the result of illness and high cost of health care?
Our system is broken and unsustainable. The "Obama Plan" isn't 2,000 pages long. It's 3 words long: quality, accessible and affordable. We'll be debating it formally in Congress over the next six weeks. The more we can learn from the successes and failures of other countries' answers, the better our solutions will be.
The "Healing of America" is the right book at the right time.
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Overview
Important and powerful...a rich tour of health care around the world."-Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times
How is it that all other industrialized democracies provide health care for their citizens as a reasonable cost-something the United States has never managed to do? In The Healing of America, New York Times bestselling author T.S. Reid shows how they do it, bringing to bear his talent for explaining complex issues in a clear, engaging way. In his global quest to find a prescription for American health care, Reid finds that it's not all "socialized medicine" out there. Instead, many industrialized democracies rely on free-market models the U.S. ...