Health
Headlines
Get
the latest news in prevention and health matters. This
feature includes daily postings and recent archives to
keep you up to date on health reports and wires around
the world.
Weekly
Wellness
Get
informed with weekly wellness facts in a diversity of
health topics from prevention to fitness and nutrition.
Tips
Great
tips on what you need to know about keeping healthy and
active all year round.
Canadians Healthier Than Americans
You can add Canadians to the list of foreigners who are healthier
than Americans. Americans are 42 percent more likely than Canadians
to have diabetes, 32 percent more likely to have high blood pressure,
and 12 percent more likely to have arthritis, Harvard Medical
School researchers found. That is according to a survey in which
American and Canadian adults were asked over the telephone about
their health.
The study comes less than a month after other researchers reported
that middle-aged, white Americans are much sicker than their counterparts
in England.
"We're really falling behind other nations," said Dr. Steffie
Woolhandler, a co-author of the Canadian study.
Canada's national health insurance program is at least part of
the reason for the differences found in the study, Woolhandler
said. Universal coverage makes it easier for more Canadians to
get disease-preventing health services, she said.
James Smith, a RAND Corp. researcher who co-authored the American-English
study, disagreed. His research found that England's national health
insurance program did not explain the difference in disease rates,
because even Americans with insurance were in worse health.
"To me, that's unlikely," he said of the idea that universal
coverage explains international differences.
Woolhandler said her findings were different in at least one
important respect: In the Canadian study, insured Americans and
Canadians had about the same rates of disease. It was the uninsured
Americans who made the overall U.S. figures worse, she said.
The study, released Tuesday, is being published in the American
Journal of Public Health. It is based on a telephone survey of
about 3,500 Canadians and 5,200 U.S. residents in 2002-03. Those
surveyed were 18 or older.
The results are based on what those surveyed said about their
health. In contrast, the researchers in the American-English study
surveyed participants and also examined people and conducted laboratory
tests on them.
The new study found that 6.7 percent of Americans and 4.7 percent
of Canadians reported having diabetes; 18.3 percent and 13.9 percent,
respectively, reported having high blood pressure; and 17.9 percent
and 16.0 percent said they had arthritis. The Americans also reported
more heart disease and major depression, but those difference
were too small to be statistically significant.
About 21 percent of Americans said they were obese, compared
with 15 percent of Canadians. And about 13.5 percent of the Americans
admitted to a sedentary lifestyle, versus 6.5 percent of Canadians.
However, more Canadians were smokers 19 percent, compared
with about 17 percent of Americans.
About 42 percent of the Americans rated their quality of health
care as excellent, while 39 percent of Canadians did.
Also, 92 percent of American women said they had a Pap test within
the last five years, while 83 percent of Canadian women had. But
Canadians have lower death rates from cervical cancer. "It's a
little hard to interpret," Woolhandler said.
One more plus for the Americans: Fewer than 1 percent said they
were unable to get needed care because of long waits, compared
with 3.5 percent of Canadians.
However, about 80 percent of Americans had a regular doctor,
while 85 percent of Canadians did. And nearly twice as many Americans
said there were medicines they needed but couldn't afford (9.9
percent versus 5.1 percent).