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Canadians
Living Longer, Getting Fatter
TORONTO
(Reuters) - Canadian life expectancy is rising in line with that
in other countries, but kids are getting fatter and nurses fall
sick too much, according to an annual survey of the largely state-funded
healthcare system.
The fact-packed
87-page report, released on Tuesday, also said Canada compared
well with other industrialized countries in terms of survival
rates from transplant surgery.
Per capita
health care expenditure was below that in countries such as Germany
and the United States and government picked up some 70% of the
overall health care bill.
``We see life
expectancy continuing to increase in Canada--we have seen a six-year
gain since the 1970s,'' said Michael Decter, of the Canadian Institute
for Health Information, the nonprofit organization that wrote
the report.
``We are keeping
up with the competition, and we have seen substantial gains not
just in how we live, but in the quality of life.''
The report
put Canadian life expectancy at 79 years from birth, above France
and the United States, but below Japan's 80 years. ``Canada has
been near the top of international life expectancy ratings for
seven decades,'' it said.
But Health
Minister Alan Rock said the report card was not yet good enough
for Canada, which is proud of its universal medicare system and
shuns the idea of a US-style system with Rolls-Royce treatment
for those with full insurance coverage but large gaps for those
who cannot afford to pay.
``We are not
doing a good enough job, and we have not met our targets,'' Rock
said at a news conference launching the report. ''Health care
is going to have to redouble its efforts, look for more money
and hire more analysts.''
The report
was the second annual survey of medical services across Canada,
the world's second-largest country by area. It found disparities
in treatment and life expectancy in different parts of Canada
and fretted that too many major operations were taking place in
hospitals with relatively little experience.
``We have
too many centers undertaking complex procedures such as heart
surgery,'' said Decter. ``The result may be unnecessary complications
and unnecessary deaths.''
Decter also
expressed concern about rising child obesity, something that can
cause problems such as diabetes later in life. Some 29% of Canadian
boys and 23% of girls were overweight in 1996, according to recently
released data, up from 15% for boys and girls in 1984.
Nurses fell
ill more often than workers in supposedly high-risk shift-work
occupations, police or fire services, for instance, taking some
three weeks a year off sick. Many nurses complain of low pay levels
and low morale, although evidence of a major nursing shortage
in the future was not conclusive.
The report
also highlighted high rates of in-house health care, where family
members act as care givers to an elderly relative or someone with
disabilities.
A quarter
of seniors in a recent survey said their children provided support
when they fell ill and a survey in the western province of Alberta
showed that one in three respondents had helped a sick family
member in the last six months.
``If one in
four adults is providing home care...a burden is falling on families,''
Rock said, stressing the need to make at-home health care services
more readily available.
Reference
Source 89
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