Losing patients: a film questions Canada's nationalized health care.The Barbarian Invasions, recently released on DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. by Buena Vista Home Video, offers a disturbing vision of state-run medicine. The Canadian film won two awards at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival Cannes Film Festival Film festival held annually in Cannes, France. First held in 1946 for the recognition of artistic achievement, the festival came to provide a rendezvous for those interested in the art and influence of the movies. (best screenplay and best actress) and took home this year's Oscar for best foreign-language film. It is the story of a man with a terminal disease who renews his relationships with his friends and family, especially his adult son. Much of the action takes place in a hospital in Montreal, Quebec, where director and screenwriter Denys Arcand
Georges-Henri Denys Arcand, C.C., O.Q. dissects the Canadian health care system. The film opens with a nun struggling down the corridor of a crowded ward to administer Holy Communion. Patients, health professionals, even electricians, are tripping over each other, packed into an environment of general confusion. And yet there is another floor of the hospital that is completely closed, thanks to a government directive. The dying man's son is a successful investment banker Investment Banker A person representing a financial institution that is in the business of raising capital for corporations and municipalities. Notes: An investment banker may not accept deposits or make commercial loans. in London. He's the kind of guy who can wriggle around anything. First he wrangles his way into the hospital's management offices without a pass and corners the manager, who is completely isolated from the chaos outside. He offers her a bribe to get his father moved out of the zoo and into a private space on the empty floor. She quietly takes the bribe but points out that she can do nothing without the hospital employees' union. The son pays off the union boss to prepare a private room on the empty floor. Painters, carpenters, and other workers quickly make it up. Then, because there is virtually no access to PET (positron emission tomography positron emission tomography: see PET scan. positron emission tomography (PET) Imaging technique used in diagnosis and biomedical research. ) scans in Canada, the banker takes his father to Vermont to get one. One of the son's friends in Baltimore--one of many Canadian doctors who have emigrated to the U.S.--examines the scan and informs him his father will have a much better chance in Baltimore than in Montreal. Remarkably, the father will have none of it: "I voted for socialized so·cial·ize v. so·cial·ized, so·cial·iz·ing, so·cial·iz·es v.tr. 1. To place under government or group ownership or control. 2. To make fit for companionship with others; make sociable. health care," he proclaims, "and I'm prepared to suffer the consequences!" With this line, the father speaks for too many Canadians, who often wrap their national identity in nationalized health care. This is why Canadian politicians have not had the courage to give Canadians more health freedom. But the pain and in humanity caused by the Canadian system are starting to make even the most nationalistic of us reconsider the amount of control over health services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract that we've ceded to our government. The Barbarian Invasions tells us a lot about the consequences of government monopoly health care. The hospitals are poorly managed, the doctors and nurses confused, the unions who really run the show thuggish, the patients all but ignored. The film has sparked a debate in Canada about the role of the state in health care. Any American who thinks health care in the United States Health care in the United States is provided by many separate legal entities. The U.S. spends more on health care, both as a proportion of gross domestic product (GDP) and on a per-capita basis, than any other nation in the world. Current estimates put U.S. would be improved by implementing a single-payer system single-payer system Health reform Social medicine, in which all medical services are paid by a single reimbursement agency. See Canadian plan, Clinton Plan, Managed care, Socialized medicine. would learn much from it too. John R. Graham is an adjunct scholar at Canada's Fraser Institute. A version of this article ran on TechCentralStation.com. |
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