Guest guest Posted June 24, 2004 Report Share Posted June 24, 2004 [Finally! An article about prevention in Canada's national newspaper] http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20040624/HPICARD2\ 4/TPHealth/ Keep people healthy in the first place By ANDRÉ PICARD PUBLIC HEALTH REPORTER Thursday, June 24, 2004 - Page A19 'Good health is the bedrock on which social progress is built. A nation of healthy people can do those things that make life worthwhile, and as the level of health increases so does the potential for happiness. " So begins the now legendary report titled A New Perspective on the Health of Canadians, more commonly referred to as the Lalonde Report, after then minister of health and welfare André Lalonde. When those words were written in 1974, Canadians spent less than $10-billion annually on health care. Today, we spend in excess of $120-billion. Why have costs risen inexorably for three decades? Why has this level of spending, $3,839 per capita and rising, resulted in only marginal improvements in health outcomes? Why does the health system of one of the richest nations on Earth sputter from one crisis to the next? One of the main reasons is that today's political leaders lack vision. Another is that governments of all stripes have systematically failed to heed the Lalonde Report, which was indeed a visionary document. The report is considered one of the great achievements of the modern public-health movement because it brought into the mainstream the notion of socio-economic determinants of health. It summed up the concept like this: " The health-care system is only one of many ways of maintaining and improving health. Of equal or greater importance is . . . raising the general standard of living, important sanitary measures for protecting public health, and advances in medical science. " In other words, there are a host of non-medical factors that have a tremendous impact on our health as individuals and as a nation: Employment (or a reasonable income), decent housing, clean water, breathable air, healthy food, support for raising children and caring for the elderly, having a modicum of control over one's life, good safety regulations and health education. If that protective net exists, far fewer people are going to get sick in the first place. If those basic needs are not met, no health system, however wealthy, is going to improve the health status of the population. Yet, in Canada, we persist in thinking that good health can be ensured by having a hospital in every community, by bolstering the number of physicians per capita, by ensuring that no one waits for more than 30 seconds for treatment in an emergency room, and that we all have unlimited access to the latest technological bells and whistles such as PET (positron emission tomography) scans. The Lalonde Report made clear that this obsession with an ever-expanding illness-care system is a losing proposition. " The traditional view of equating the level of health in Canada with the availability of physicians and hospitals is inadequate, " the report said. The Lalonde Report was also prescient on the issue of chronic diseases. Heart disease, diabetes, cancer, lung disease and the like -- many preventable or, at the very least, whose effects can be attenuated -- now gobble up two in every three health dollars. Not only do we do a poor job of preventing these chronic conditions, the management of patients with chronic conditions remains poor. Many sufferers, particularly the frail elderly, are preposterously overtreated: They are drugged and hospitalized, when what they need is home care and social support. " For a health-care system whose essential motivation is based on curing the sick, the treatment of the chronically ill is not very satisfying, " said the Lalonde Report. We need to be motivated to prevent and to " care " as much as to " cure, " it said. What is eerie is just how timely and current the Lalonde Report remains today. Canadian society has changed a lot in 30 years, but the health system remains stuck in a bizarre time warp. It's time for some progress. This is not to suggest that we abandon the excellent sickness care provided by the publicly funded health system. What the Lalonde Report recommended in 1974 remains valid today: We need to shift resources to prevention, health promotion and other aspects of the social safety net so that, ultimately, there will be a healthier population and better care for those who need it. The report, sadly, noted that its message would be a hard sell in a world fixated on short-term gain. " There is the paradox of everyone agreeing to the importance of research and prevention, yet continuing to increase disproportionately the amount spent on treating existing illness. " Since then, Canadians have spent an eye-popping $1.65-trillion (yes, trillion) on health care -- only about 2 per cent of the total has gone to prevention. As the Lalonde Report says, in its charmingly understated way: " It would appear that steps need to be taken to reconcile the foregoing . . .. " apicard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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