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'''David George Gratzer''' (born September 5, 1974) is a ], ], author, Congressional expert witness; he was a senior fellow at both the ] and the ]. Though he has written essays on topics as diverse as obesity and political campaigns, he is best known for his first book, published by ECW Press, when he was just 24: ''Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System''. That book won the ] established by the ] and was a national bestseller in his native Canada.{{citation needed|date=October 2012}} Gratzer is a critic of the ], and of U.S. President ]'s health care reform proposals. Gratzer was health care policy advisor to ]'s ]. | |||
'''David George Gratzer''' (born September 5, 1974 in ], ]) is a Canadian ], conservative ], author, and critic of the Canadian health care system. He is a practicing psychiatrist in Toronto and senior fellow at the ]<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Canadian who's who">{{cite book |author=Lumley, Elizabeth (ed.) |year=2007 |title=Canadian who's who |edition=2007 ed., v. 42 |location=Toronto |publisher=] |id=ISSN 0068-9963 |pages=514}}</ref>, and as advisor to ] in his ] he was the source for a disputed statistic that led to criticism of Giuliani by a medical statistician, a British politician and by the media in both the United States and Europe. | |||
== |
==Early life== | ||
Gratzer born September 5, 1974, in ], ]. Gratzer's father, ], is a professor of ] at the ] who emigrated from ] to the ] in 1963 and to ] in 1966. Gratzer's mother, Catherine, is a retired dentist.<ref name="Canadian who's who">{{cite book |editor=Lumley, Elizabeth |year=2007 |title=Canadian who's who |edition=2007 ed., v. 42 |location=Toronto |publisher=] |oclc=2604443 |page=514}}</ref> Gratzer's older brother earned his medical degree and now practices in the United States as a psychiatrist.<ref name="Canadian who's who"/> | |||
Gratzer earned a ] at the University of Manitoba in 1996, was president of the ] (UMSU) during his final undergraduate year 1995–1996, and was appointed by the ] ] to the University of Manitoba ] for four successive years from 1994 to 1998.<ref name="Canadian who's who"/> | |||
Gratzer holds a ] and an ] <!-- | |||
--><ref name="Canadian who's who"/> from the University of Manitoba. He was appointed to the University of Manitoba ] for four successive years from 1994–1998.<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Canadian who's who"/> | |||
In his early years, Gratzer was not particularly interested in health policy issues. As he noted later:<ref>Gratzer D. . Speech to the Heritage Foundation. 2006 October 18.</ref> | |||
Gratzer first book ''Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System'' (1999), which was awarded the ], was about problems with the Canadian health care system and his proposed solution--]s. .<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Tertius 2000">{{cite journal |author=Tertius |month=May 3, |year=2000 |title=Jumping the Donner Foundation's gun |journal=] |pages=R2}}</ref><!-- | |||
--><ref name="Square 2000">{{cite journal |author=Square D |month=June 27, |year=2000 |title=Fourth-year medical student takes Donner Prize |journal=] |volume=162 |issues=13 |pages=1863 |url=http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/162/13/1863.pdf}}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|text=When I grew up in Canada, I was interested in getting into medical school. If you had stopped me on the street when I was 16 or 17 and asked me about the Medical College Admission Test, I could have given you a variety of very satisfying, unique statistics on admission rates and so on. I didn't give a lot of thought to health policy. When HillaryCare was debated in the United States, I remember vaguely thinking there was something good about the idea: After all, government should be involved in health care. I had never even been to Washington, D.C.}} | |||
His book ''The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care'' (2006), is his view of the problems with the United States health care system and his proposed solutions. The book argues for meaningful choice and competition in health care. | |||
==Medical school and ''Code Blue'' (1999)== | |||
He has been a regular contributor to ]'s '']'', the '']'' and the '']'', and has written wrote columns on health care in several major newspapers and magazines, including the '']'', Conrad Black's '']'' and the '']'' | |||
Gratzer attended ] at the University of Manitoba from 1996 to 2000 and earned an ] in 2000.<ref name="Canadian who's who"/> On November 15, 1996, during his first year of medical school, the ''] (CMAJ)'' published a ]<ref name="Gratzer 1996">{{cite journal |author=Gratzer, David |date=November 15, 1996 |title=Drawing comparisons and conclusions between Canadian and US malpractice insurance |journal=] |volume=155 |issue=10 |pages=1389–90 |pmc=1335102 |pmid=8943923}}</ref><ref name="Korcok 1996b">{{cite journal |author=Korcok, Milan |date=November 15, 1996 |title=Author response to: Drawing comparisons and conclusions between Canadian and US malpractice insurance |journal=] |volume=155 |issue=10 |page=1390 |pmc=1335102 |pmid=8943923}}</ref> from Gratzer criticizing a June 15, 1996 ''CMAJ'' report comparing reserve funds held by the ] (CMPA) to those held by ] insurers in the United States.<ref name="Korcok 1996a">{{cite journal |author=Korcok, Milan |date=June 15, 1996 |title=CMPA not alone in pursuing huge reserves, CMAJ survey of US firms reveals |journal=] |volume=154 |issue=12 |pages=1891–94 |pmc=1487749 |pmid=8653650}}</ref> | |||
While in medical school, Gratzer was a regular contributor of opinion columns to '']'', wrote a weekly opinion column for the '']'' and the '']'', and wrote columns on health care that appeared in several major newspapers and magazines, including the '']'' and '']'' and '']''. A 1997 Gratzer column "Being a young conservative is nothing to apologize for" said "I am a conservative. This is somewhat unfortunate, as people don't seem to understand how anyone under 40 can be right-wing."<ref name="Gratzer 1997">{{cite news |author=Gratzer, David |date=July 20, 1997 |title=Being a young conservative is nothing to apologize for |work=] |page=A9}}</ref> A 1999 Gratzer column "Raising the minimum wage hurts the poor it hopes to help" lamented that even "two of Canada's three right-leaning governments have chosen to hike their minimum wages" and that "minimum wage earners are not underpaid but underproductive"<ref name="Gratzer 1999">{{cite news |author=Gratzer, David |date=January 2, 1999 |title=Raising the minimum wage hurts the poor it hopes to help: Cheap compassion comes with a significant cost |work=] |page=D08}}</ref> Gratzer won $250 as fourth place runner-up in 1998–1999 and won $2,500 as first prize in the 1999–2000 ] Journalism Competition of the ] at ] for his newspaper columns.<ref name="Canadian who's who"/> | |||
In his youth Gratzer said that he was unapologetically conservative <!-- | |||
--><ref name="Gratzer 1997">{{cite journal |author=Gratzer, David |month=July 20, |year=1997 |title=Being a young conservative is nothing to apologize for |journal=] |pages=A9}}</ref> and that minimum wage earners are not underpaid but underproductive.<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Gratzer 1999">{{cite journal |author=Gratzer, David |month=January 2, |year=1999 |title=Raising the minimum wage hurts the poor it hopes to help: Cheap compassion comes with a significant cost |journal=] |pages=D08}}</ref> He won first prize in the 1999–2000 ] Journalism Competition of the libertarian ] at ] for his newspaper columns.<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Canadian who's who"/> | |||
During his second year of medical school, Gratzer began writing a book about problems with the ] but could not get anyone interested. Rejection letters piled up after he completed the book and he had doubts about his ability to get taken seriously until his third year of medical school, when ], professor of ] at ] and co-founder of ] agreed to publish his book.<ref name="Aubin 2002">{{cite news |author=Aubin, Benoit |date=September 9, 2002 |title=Leaders of tomorrow: 25 Canadians under age 30 |journal=] |pages=20–30|display-authors=etal}}</ref> In August 1999, during his fourth year of medical school, ECW Press published the 24-year-old Gratzer's first book, ''Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System'' | |||
Gratzer was the editor of ''Better Medicine: Reforming Canadian Health Care'', a book of essays which concluded with an essay by Gratzer titled ''The ABCs of HSAs.'' He has supported the concept of Medical Savings Accounts. <!-- | |||
--><ref name="CMAJ highlights">{{cite journal |author=|year=2002 |month=July 23, |title=Highlights of this issue : Medical Savings Accounts |journal=] |volume=167 |issues=2 |pages=117 |url=http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/167/2/117 |issue=2 |day=23}}</ref> with: a commentary by Gratzer in favor of MSAs<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Gratzer 2002">{{cite journal |author=Gratzer D |month=July 23, |year=2002 |title=It's time to consider Medical Savings Accounts |journal=] |volume=167 |issues=2 |pages=151–2 |pmid=12160121 |url=http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/167/2/151.pdf}}</ref> as a counterpoint to a commentary opposing MSAs,<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Hurley 2002">{{cite journal |author=Hurley J |month=July 23, |year=2002 |title=Medical Savings Accounts will not advance Canadian health care objectives |journal=] |volume=167 |issues=2 |pages=152–3 |pmid=12160122 |url=http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/167/2/152.pdf}}</ref> a ] research article opposing MSAs,<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Forget 2002">{{cite journal |author=Forget EL, Deber R, Roos LL |month=July 23, |year=2002 |title=Medical Savings Accounts: will they reduce costs? |journal=] |volume=167 |issues=2 |pages=143–7 |pmid=12160120 |url=http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/167/2/143.pdf}}</ref> a peer-reviewed review article opposing MSAs,<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Shortt 2002">{{cite journal |author=Shortt SE |month=July 23, |year=2002 |title=Medical Savings Accounts in publicly funded health care systems: enthusiasm versus evidence |journal=] |volume=167 |issues=2 |pages=159–62 |pmid=12160125 |url=http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/167/2/159.pdf}}</ref> | |||
and a ] by a University of Toronto medical student of Gratzer's ''Better Medicine: Reforming Canadian Health Care''.<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Dhalla 2002">{{cite journal |author=Dhalla IA |month=July 23, |year=2002 |title=On policy and cherries |journal=] |volume=167 |issue=2 |pages=173–4 |url=http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/167/2/173.pdf}}</ref> | |||
Gratzer wrote about deficiencies in Canadian health care and argued that they were the direct result of the system's design, and thus not amendable to simple reforms. | |||
In September 2002, Gratzer was one of 25 Canadians under age 30 featured in a '']'' "Leaders of Tomorrow" cover story.<!-- | |||
--><ref name="Aubin 2002">{{cite journal |author=Aubin B, et al. |month=September 9, |year=2002 |title=Leaders of tomorrow: 25 Canadians under age 30 |journal=] |volume=115 |issue=36 |pages=20–30}}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|text=The magicians believe that, with just the right combination of government regulations, medicare will magically work. The spendthrifts argue that more government spending would solve every problem—from the attitude of the grumpiest hospital orderly to the lengthiest waiting list for radiation therapy… On the surface, they seem to have little in common. Both magicians and spendthrifts, however, believe in a government-run health care system. And while they don’t agree on the best way to reform medicare, they basically agree that government action will provide the solution.<ref name="CodeBlue"/>{{rp|14–15}}|sign=|source=}} | |||
In May 2006, Gratzer became ] in psychiatry.<!-- | |||
--><ref>{{cite web |date=May 14, 2006 |title=ABPN Congratulations |url=http://www.abpn.com/downloads/diplomate%20lists/psych_cert_051406.pdf |publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
Gratzer called for market-based reforms. He won praise from a former Member of Parliament, Stephen Harper, who wrote: "Gratzer proposes a workable solution for the biggest public policy problem of the coming generation—government-controlled health care monopoly… Canada needs Gratzer’s solution."<ref name="CodeBlue">{{cite book |author=Gratzer, David |date=August 1999 |title=Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System |location=Toronto |publisher=ECW Press}}</ref>{{rp|back cover}} Harper later became the ]. | |||
==Allegations regarding the misuse of statistics== | |||
On May 4, 2000, Gratzer was awarded $25,000 by the ] as winner of its second annual ] for best public policy book of 1999 for ''Code Blue''.<ref name="Tertius 2000">{{cite news |author=Tertius |date=May 3, 2000 |title=Jumping the Donner Foundation's gun |work=] |page=R2}}</ref><ref name="Square 2000">{{cite journal |author=Square, David |date=June 27, 2000 |title=Fourth-year medical student takes Donner Prize |journal=] |volume=162 |issue=13 |page=1863 |url=http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/162/13/1863.pdf}}</ref> | |||
On several occasions, critics have accused Gratzer of misusing medical statistics. | |||
==Residency and ''Better Medicine'' (2002)== | |||
As a student, Gratzer became involved in a minor public dispute about the use of statistics, this time by another writer. Responding to an article he had read in in the '']'' (CMAJ), Gratzer claimed that the article had misused statistics to justify the large reserves held by the Canadian Medical Protective Association (CMPA). The author disputed that his use of statistics was "deceptive" or "provide skewed data" or "distort the presentation" as Gratzer had claimed.<ref name="Korcok 1996">{{cite journal |author=Korcok M |month=June 15, |year=1996 |title=CMPA not alone in pursuing huge reserves, CMAJ survey of US firms reveals |journal=] |volume=154 |issues=12 |pages=1891–4 |pmid=8653650 |url=http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=1487749&blobtype=pdf}}</ref><ref name="Gratzer 1996">{{cite journal |author=Gratzer D |month=November 15, |year=1996 |title=Drawing comparisons and conclusions between Canadian and US malpractice insurance |journal=] |volume=155 |issues=10 |pages=1389–90 |pmid=8943923 |url=http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=1335102&blobtype=pdf}}</ref>. | |||
In June 2000, Gratzer graduated from medical school and in July 2000 began a five-year psychiatry ] program at the ]. During his psychiatry residency, Gratzer continued to write newspaper opinion columns. A 2001 Gratzer column "Make room for prescription drug ads on television" advocated allowing ] of ]s on television in Canada<ref name="Gratzer 2001">{{cite news |author=Gratzer, David |date=May 4, 2001 |title=Make room for prescription drug ads on television |work=] |page=A15}}</ref> | |||
(the ] and ] are the only countries that allow direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs).<ref name="Mintzes 2006">{{cite book |author=Mintzes, Barbara |date=January 2006 |title=Direct-to-Consumer Advertising of Prescription Drugs in Canada: What are the Public Health Implications? |location=Toronto |publisher=Health Council of Canada |isbn=0-9739725-6-4 |url=http://www.healthcouncilcanada.ca/docs/papers/2006/hcc_dtc-advertising_200601_e_v6.pdf |access-date=2009-07-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080911121348/http://www.healthcouncilcanada.ca/docs/papers/2006/hcc_dtc-advertising_200601_e_v6.pdf |archive-date=2008-09-11 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
In April 2002, ECW Press published ''Better Medicine: Reforming Canadian Health Care'' a book of essays edited by Gratzer. The collection of essays had 17 contributors from 3 countries and 2 continents. Essayists included historian ] and columnist ]. Dr. ], a physician and former president of the Canadian Medical Association, wrote the introduction. Gratzer co-wrote an essay on market reforms seen in various European countries, and also wrote the concluding essay on medical savings accounts. | |||
Gratzer's work as an adviser to Rudolph Giuliani came to national and international media attention when the politician released a radio ad in New Hampshire that claimed, "My chance of surviving prostate cancer—and thank God I was cured of it—in the United States? 82%. My chances of surviving prostate cancer in England? Only 44%, under socialized medicine."<ref>{{cite episode |title=Chances |url=http://youtube.com/watch?v=_csAtVGNHMc |series=Rudy Giuliani Radio Advertisement |airdate= 2007-10-29 }}</ref> | |||
In September 2002, Gratzer was one of 25 Canadians under age 30 featured in a '']'' "Leaders of Tomorrow" cover story.<ref name="Aubin 2002"/> In 2002, while still a psychiatry resident, Gratzer joined the ] as a senior fellow.<ref name="Gratzer 2002b">{{cite web |author=Gratzer, David |date=November 1, 2002 |title=Universal Health Care Revived? The electoral stakes in Oregon |publisher=] |url=http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-gratzer110102.asp}}</ref> | |||
A '']'' article<ref></ref> by Gratzer was the source for the claim. In that piece Gratzer said, "...if we measure a health care system by how well it serves its sick citizens, American medicine excels. Five-year cancer survival rates bear this out.... The survival rate for prostate cancer is 81.2% here, yet 61.7% in France and down to 44.3% in England — a striking variation." | |||
In 2004, Gratzer was first author of a ] brief report "Lifetime rates of alcoholism in adults with anxiety, depression, or co-morbid depression/anxiety: a community survey of Ontario" published in the ''Journal of Affective Disorders''.<ref name="Gratzer 2004">{{cite journal |author1=Gratzer, David |author2=Levitan, Robert D. |author3=Sheldon, Tess |author4=Toneatto, Tony |author5=Rector, Neil A. |author6=Goering, Paula |date=April 2004 |title=Lifetime rates of alcoholism in adults with anxiety, depression, or co-morbid depression/anxiety: a community survey of Ontario |journal=J Affect Disord |volume=79 |issue=1–3 |pages=209–15 | |||
This claim was contested by the UK Health Secretary.<ref></ref> Several American news outlets investigated the matter after the advertisement was released. According to articles published by the ]'s ], PolitiFact.com (a service of the '']'' and '']''), '']'', '']'', and '']'', Giuliani's statistics were "false" and "innumerate."<ref name="bogus">{{cite web |date=2007-10-30 | url = http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/a_bogus_cancer_statistic.html | title = A Bogus Cancer Statistic | publisher = ]}}</ref><ref name="bogus again">{{cite web |date=2007-11-08 | url = http://www.factcheck.org/bogus_cancer_stats_again.html | title = Bogus Cancer Stats, Again | publisher = ]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=2007-11-03 | url = http://www.sptimes.com/2007/11/03/Opinion/Giuliani_s_dose_of_fe.shtml | title = Giuliani's dose of fear | publisher = '']''}}</ref><ref name="gone wrong">{{cite web |date=2007-10-31 | url = http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/article/2007/oct/31/cancer-ad-gone-wrong-rudy/ | title = A cancer ad gone wrong for Rudy | publisher = PolitiFact.com}}</ref><ref name="fiction">{{cite web |date=2007-12-02 | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/02/opinion/02pubed.html?sq=Fact%20and%20Fiction%20on%20the%20Campaign%20Trail&st=nyt&scp=1&pagewanted=all | title = The Public Editor. Fact and Fiction on the Campaign Trail | publisher = '']''}}</ref><ref name="Pinocchio Awards">{{cite web |date=2007-12-31 |url=http://blog.washingtonpost.com/fact-checker/2007/12/the_pinocchio_2007_awards.html | title = The 2007 Pinocchio Awards. The top ten fibs of the past year |publisher='']''}}</ref><ref name="junk stats">{{cite web |date=2007-12-22 |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article3085272.ece |title=The worst junk stats of 2007 |publisher='']''}}</ref> PolitiFact.com said, "Rudy Giuliani used cancer statistics from a conservative journal to compare the U.S. and the U.K. but the stats are wrong and the underlying comparison is faulty at best." | |||
|doi=10.1016/S0165-0327(02)00355-5 |pmid=15023496}}</ref> | |||
On June 28, 2005, Gratzer testified in support of H.R. 2355, the ], at a hearing of the ] ] of the ]. | |||
"I find it personally distasteful to have Mr. Giuliani exploiting cancer patients to make a political statement," said Andrew Vickers, associate attending research methodologist at ]’s ].<ref></ref> "As a prominent individual who is a cancer survivor, I would think it’s more incumbent on him to be accurate in the way he uses cancer statistics," he said.<ref name="gone wrong" /> | |||
==Independent practice and ''The Cure'' (2006)== | |||
After the advertisement aired, the group which Gratzer cited as his source in the '']'' article, ], issued a statement stating that the five-year survival data cited in the ''City Journal'' article could not be calculated from the statistics in that report.<ref>{{cite web |date=2007-10-30 |title=Statement by The Commonwealth Fund on Use of Prostate Cancer Statistics |publisher=] |url=http://www.commonwealthfund.org/newsroom/newsroom_show.htm?doc_id=568333}}</ref> | |||
On June 30, 2005, Gratzer completed his University of Toronto psychiatry residency and became ] for independent practice of medicine in Ontario.<ref>{{cite web |author=Anonymous |date=June 30, 2005 |title=David George Gratzer - registration 75146 |url=http://www.cpso.on.ca/docsearch |publisher=]}}</ref> In April 2006, Gratzer became ] to practice medicine in ].<ref>{{cite web |author=Anonymous |date=April 26, 2006 |title=David George Gratzer - license MD428922 |url=http://www.licensepa.state.pa.us |publisher=] |access-date=July 18, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120511181247/http://www.licensepa.state.pa.us/ |archive-date=May 11, 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In May 2006, Gratzer became ] in psychiatry.<ref>{{cite web |author=Anonymous |date=May 14, 2006 |title=ABPN Congratulations - David George Gratzer |url=http://www.abpn.com/downloads/diplomate%20lists/psych_cert_051406.pdf |publisher=] |access-date=July 24, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080911121348/http://www.abpn.com/downloads/diplomate%20lists/psych_cert_051406.pdf |archive-date=September 11, 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
In October 2006, ] published Gratzer's book, ''The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care'', about problems with the ]. | |||
''The Washington Post'' said: "The former New York mayor has had personal experience battling prostate cancer, but he's confused about the stats, according to several experts we consulted." <blockquote>''"When you introduce ] and ] into the equation, the survival statistics become ]," said Howard Parnes, chief of the <span class="plainlinks"></span> at the ]. You are identifying many people who would ]." "You can't say that it's better to have prostate cancer here or in some other country," with a developed health care system, said <span class="plainlinks">, chairman of the Department of ] at the ], who also serves as a spokesman for the ].''<ref name="Rudy wrong">{{cite web |date=2007-10-30 |title=Rudy Wrong On Cancer Survival Chances |publisher=] |url=http://blog.washingtonpost.com/fact-checker/2007/10/rudy_miscalculates_cancer_surv.html}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
{{blockquote|text=The problem and the predicament of American health care can be stated in a single, paradoxical sentence: Everyone agrees that it’s the best in the world, but nobody really likes it. On the one hand, we are so blessed with medical breakthroughs that we take them virtually for granted. Cardiac care has been revolutionized in only a few short years; death due to cardiac disease has fallen by nearly two-thirds in the past five decades. Polio is confined to the history books. Childhood leukemia, once a death sentence, is almost always curable… Yet while the quality of American medicine has never been better, angst over American health care has never been greater. The state of Medicare, the cost of prescription drugs, and the numbers of uninsured are all considered crises.<ref name="The Cure"/>{{rp|4}}}} | |||
'']'' ] ] said that Giuliani's statistics were "just wrong" and "scare tactics."<ref>{{cite journal |author=] |month=November 2, |year=2007 |title=Prostates and Prejudices |journal=] |pages=A.27 |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/02/opinion/02krugman.html}}</ref> | |||
The book advocated moving health-care decisions closer to individuals and their families. Gratzer cited health savings accounts as a success story and bemoaned the state of health care in countries with government-run systems. He advocated various reforms: Gratzer proposed turning over all current ] funding for Medicaid to ] ] in the form of ]s to experiment with, using welfare reform as a model; tightening Medicaid eligibility for ]; expanding health savings accounts; and encouraging the purchase of private ]. | |||
Gratzer later defended the claim: "The mayor is right." | |||
In the last chapter, he proposed more far-reaching reforms while acknowledging that neither political party would currently advocate them: | |||
<blockquote>Krugman and others have compared statistical ]. My 44% figure, replicated by ] ] and ], looks at a snapshot in time, based on decade-old ] data; Krugman's 74% is a ] from ] ] today.<ref>"Rudy Is Right In Data Duel About Cancer." ''Investor's Business Daily''. </ref></blockquote> | |||
# "Making Health Insurance Portable": ending the ] of ] and scrapping government regulations mandating what conditions and whom and at what rates private health insurance companies must provide coverage, thereby making it easier for families to purchase health insurance through their employer, their union, or their church; | |||
# "Shoring up Medicare": pre-funding the program (either through individual accounts or a trust fund), and raising the Medicare eligibility age to 70; | |||
# "Creating a Market for Medical Progress": ending the ]'s requirement that drugs demonstrate "efficacy", and return to only requiring pre-marketing demonstration of ''safety''. | |||
The Foreword was written by Nobel Laureate ]. He wrote: "David Gratzer is a practicing psychiatrist who combines firsthand knowledge of medical practice in both his native Canada and the U.S. with an independent point of view and a rare capacity for lucid exposition of complex technical material... If you want a well-written, interesting yet authoritative and thorough account of what is wrong with medicine today and how to cure American health care, this is the book for you."<ref name="The Cure">{{cite book |author=Gratzer, David |date=October 2006 |title=The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care |location=New York |publisher=] |isbn=1-59403-153-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/curehowcapitalis00grat }}</ref>{{rp|foreword}} | |||
FactCheck.org disputed Gratzer's response: | |||
''The Cure'' was named a "Top Ten Reading Selection for 2007" by the National Chamber Foundation.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://ncf.uschamber.com/books_2007/ |title=National Chamber Foundation |access-date=2010-05-31 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110523201931/http://ncf.uschamber.com/books_2007/ |archive-date=2011-05-23 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
<blockquote>Marie Diener-West, professor of ] at ], said Gratzer's attempts to calculate cancer survival rates were "inappropriate" and "very misleading." ...Peter Albertsen, professor and chief of ] at the ], called Gratzer's calculations a "very dangerous thing to do" and "complete nonsense."<ref name="bogus again"/></blockquote> | |||
==2008 campaign and beyond== | |||
In December 2007, ''The New York Times'' ] wrote, "Fact-checking the candidates has long been an important part of campaign coverage," but that: | |||
On July 30, 2007, ]'s ] named Gratzer as one of his five key health care policy advisors, along with ] senior fellow Dan Kessler, ] senior fellow Scott Atlas, ] president and CEO Sally Pipes, and The Moran Company founder and president Donald Moran.<ref name="key advisors">{{cite web |author=Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee, Inc. |date=July 30, 2007 |title=Rudy Giuliani campaign announces health care advisors |publisher=] |url=http://www.gwu.edu/~action/2008/giuliani/giuliani073007prhc.html}}<br />{{cite web |author=Tapper, Jake |date=July 30, 2007 |title=Giuliani gets healthy |publisher=] |url=http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalradar/2007/07/giuliani-gets-h.html}}</ref> During the campaign, Giuliani championed interstate health-insurance markets and tax parity for non-employer purchases of health insurance, both positions favored by Gratzer. | |||
Giuliani said that his chance of surviving prostate cancer was 82% in the US, but only 44% under socialized medicine in England. Giuliani got his facts from the Manhattan Institute, in an article by Gratzer.<ref> David Gratzer. City Journal. June 15, 2006</ref> Many cancer experts said that Gratzer was wrong, because he incorrectly compared survival statistics.<ref></ref><ref> Washington Post, October 31, 2007</ref><ref>. Giuliani falsely claims that only 44 percent of prostate cancer patients survive under "socialized medicine" in England. By Lori Robertson. October 30, 2007</ref> Gratzer responded<ref name="malignant rumor">{{cite web |author=Gratzer, David |date=October 31, 2007 |title=Malignant rumor |work=] |publisher=] |url=http://www.city-journal.org/html/eon2007-10-31dg.html}}</ref> by citing economist ], co-founder and president of the ] (NCPA), by economist ], and by ] and health policy expert ], a former ] fellow at the Manhattan Institute. Gratzer also cited<ref name="malignant rumor"/> a September 2007 '']'' article which he said found superior cancer outcomes in the United States for 16 cancers when compared to European countries.<ref name="Verdecchia 2007">{{cite journal |author=Verdecchia, Arduino and the EUROCARE-4 Working Group |date=September 2007 |title=Recent cancer survival in Europe: a 2000–02 period analysis of EUROCARE-4 data |journal=] |volume=8 |issue=9 |pages=784–96 |doi=10.1016/S1470-2045(07)70246-2|display-authors=etal |pmid=17714993}}</ref> | |||
<blockquote>To be most useful, fact-checking needs to be timely. In October, Giuliani incorrectly claimed that the prostate cancer survival rate in England, under the "socialized medicine" he falsely implied Democrats favor, was only 44 percent, compared with 82 percent in the United States. The Times initially said the number for England was "in dispute," though it provided all the necessary information for a reader to conclude it was wrong. It wasn’t until Friday that the newspaper declared the statistic a 'false statement.'<ref name="fiction"/></blockquote> | |||
After Giuliani withdrew, Gratzer endorsed the McCain health-care proposal. | |||
''The Washington Post'' awarded Giuliani its "Four Pinocchios" rating (reserved for "]s")<ref>{{cite web |date=2007-09-01 |title=The Pinocchio Test |publisher=] |url=http://blog.washingtonpost.com/fact-checker/2007/09/about_the_fact_checker.html#pinocchio}}</ref> for his radio advertisement's claims and named it one of "the top ten fibs of the year."<ref name="Pinocchio Awards"/><blockquote>''"You would get an F in epidemiology at Johns Hopkins if you did that calculation," said ] professor <span class="plainlinks"></span>, whose 2000 study "Multinational Comparisons of Health Systems Data"<ref>{{cite web |author=Anderson, Gerard F.; Hussey, Peter S. |month=October |year=2000 |title=Multinational camparisons of health systems data, 2000 |publisher=] |url=http://www.commonwealthfund.org/usr_doc/comp_chartbook_431_files.pdf?section=4039}}</ref> has been cited by Gratzer as a source for his statistics.... Five-year prostate cancer survival rates are higher in the United States than in Britain but, according to Howard Parnes of the ], this is largely a statistical ].... Both Anderson and Parnes say that it is impossible, on the basis of the available data, to conclude that Americans have a significantly better chance of surviving prostate cancer than Britons.''<ref>{{cite web |date=2007-11-07 |title=Four Pinocchios for Recidivist Rudy |publisher=] |url=http://blog.washingtonpost.com/fact-checker/2007/11/four_pinocchios_for_rudy_the_r.html}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
Gratzer testified several times during the recent health-care reform debates, including before the House Budget and Ways and Means Committees. In a June 2009 U.S. Congressional hearing on the issue of ], Gratzer and ] ] (]-]) clashed over Canadian healthcare statistics. | |||
According to a June 29, 2009, front-page article in Canada's '']'', "armed with a stack of statistics about patient wait lists in Canada, and a fusillade of dire warnings about the life-threatening consequences of government-managed care," Gratzer "has emerged as the go-to expert witness for GOP lawmakers hoping to sow doubt in Congress about the wisdom of embracing Mr. Obama's call for a ] to compete with private insurers."<ref name="Alberts 2009">{{cite news |author=Alberts, Sheldon |date=June 29, 2009 |title=Obama's foe a Canadian; Manitoba-born doctor is the Republican go-to expert on medicare |work=] |page=A1 |url=https://nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=1743138}}</ref> | |||
==Selected works== | |||
In July 2009, he appeared on 20/20 to discuss health care.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://abcnews.go.com/video/playerIndex?id=8227482|title=Video|website=] }}</ref> | |||
*''The Audacity of Distortion'', ], 10-15-08 | |||
*''] Is the Real Health-Care Reformer.'' ], 10-07-08 | |||
*''American Cancer Care Beats the Rest.'' Wall Street Journal, 07-22-08 | |||
*''A ] Prescription.'' ] Online, 06-19-08 | |||
*''Bad Medicine.'' National Review Online. 06-17-08 | |||
*''Don't believe the health hype; Enemies of Canadian health reform endlessly fret over the 'Americanization' of our medical system.'' ], 04-30-08 | |||
*''Time to Rechristen ]'', City Journal, 02-08 | |||
*''UK's Bad Medicine: Why US Has Better Odds vs. Cancer.'' New York Post, 11-05-07 | |||
*''Malignant Rumor,'' City Journal, 10-31-07 | |||
*''The Ugly Truth About ]'', City Journal, 07-30-07 | |||
*''Simplisticko'', City Journal, 07-30-07 | |||
*''A Prescription for ].'' National Review Online, 07-10-07 | |||
*''Who's Really 'Sicko'?'' Wall Street Journal, 06-28-07 | |||
*''Unhealthy Policies.'' Weekly Standard, 06-18-07 | |||
*''Mandates Are Not the Answer'', City Journal, 03-31-08 | |||
*''A Health-Care Bargain.'' Wall Street Journal. 01-31-07 | |||
*''].'' ], 02-12-07 | |||
*''Health and Taxes.'' ], 02-05-07 (This article also appears on ], 1-29-07) | |||
*''A Tale of Two Anniversaries: The Discovery of ] and the Founding of the ].'' ], 7-5-06 | |||
*''Putting Patients First.'' The ], 2-6-06 | |||
*''Health of the Union.'' Wall Street Journal, 1-26-06 | |||
*''Congress Got Something Right!'' The Wall Street Journal, 12-7-05 | |||
*''The "Choo Choo Man" Party On the Outs.'' National Review, 11-28-05 | |||
*''] on Life Support.'' The Weekly Standard, 6-27-05 | |||
*''The Return of ].'' The Weekly Standard, 5-23-05 | |||
*''What ails health care.'' The ], Spring 2005 | |||
*''Medicaid needs Surgery.'' The Weekly Standard, 2-14-05 | |||
*''Simple, but Effective.'' Wall Street Journal, 1-25-05 | |||
*''HSA Man Vs. Healthzilla.'' Wall Street Journal, 10-12-04 | |||
*''From ] to ].'' The Weekly Standard, 5-24-04 | |||
*'']'s Badly Managed Care ]'s health care record as governor is nothing to brag about.'' The Weekly Standard, 1-12-04 | |||
*''How Not to Handle Health Care.'' Wall Street Journal, 10-1-03 | |||
*''Miller’s Centrist Tale.'' National Review, 9-29-03 | |||
In November 2009, ] published a short book of his criticism of the White House plans, ''How Obama’s Government Takeover of Health Care Will Be a Disaster''. | |||
== Books == | |||
* {{cite book |author=Gratzer, David |month=September |year=1999 |title=Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System |location=Toronto |publisher=] |isbn=1550223933}} | |||
* {{cite book |author=Gratzer, David (ed.) |month=April |year=2002 |title=Better Medicine: Reforming Canadian Health Care |location=Toronto |publisher=] |isbn=1550225057}} | |||
* {{cite book |author=Gratzer, David |month=October |year=2006 |title= The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care |location=New York |publisher=] |isbn=1594031533}} Paperback edition (May 2008) ISBN 159403219X, ISBN 978-1594032196. | |||
Gratzer continues to comment and debate on health-care issues. He is founding contributor to both FrumForum (formerly NewMajority) and the Canadian version of the Huffington Post. With former Senate Majority Leader ], he debated at the ]. | |||
==Testimonies== | |||
*Before the ], 7-16-08 | |||
*Before the ], 3-25-08 | |||
*Before the ] ] of the ] in support of H.R. 2355, the ], 6-25-05 | |||
More recent work has focused on obesity. In a widely reprinted '']'' piece, he argued that society was suffering from a McVictim Syndrome with "oo many pundits, public health experts and politicians are working overtime to find scapegoats for America's obesity epidemic." He rejects this: "governments can't micromanage your waistline for you. Even if governments could magically walk you to work, ban food advertising, regulate sugar out of food and suck those fat particles out of the air, in a free society you would still have the power to drive to the nearest restaurant, shake your salt shaker and order a second piece of pie. That's why understanding—and rejecting—the McVictim culture is crucial to obesity reduction policy." | |||
== References == | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
==Works== | |||
== External links == | |||
* {{cite book |date=August 1999 |title=Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System |location=Toronto |publisher=] |isbn=1-55022-393-3 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/codebluereviving0000grat }} | |||
* {{cite web |author=] |year=2007 |title=Manhattan Institute Scholar - David Gratzer |url=http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/gratzer.htm}} | |||
* {{cite book |date=April 2002 |title=Better Medicine: Reforming Canadian Health Care |url=https://archive.org/details/bettermedicinere0000unse |url-access=registration |location=Toronto |publisher=] |isbn=1-55022-505-7}} (editor) | |||
* {{cite book |date=October 2006 |title=The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care |location=New York |publisher=] |isbn=1-59403-153-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/curehowcapitalis00grat }} Paperback edition (May 2008) {{ISBN|1-59403-219-X}}. | |||
* {{cite book |date=April 2009 |chapter=You want an Americanization of health care |editor-first=Rudyard |editor-last=Griffiths |title=American Myths: What Canadians Think They Know about the United States |location=Toronto |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-55022-505-1 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/bettermedicinere0000unse }} | |||
* {{cite book |date=November 2009 |title= How Obama's Government Takeover of Health Care Will Be a Disaster |location=New York |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-59403-460-2}} | |||
* {{cite book |date=November 2010 |chapter= Health Care |editor-first=Rudyard| editor-last=Griffiths|title=Munk Debates: Volume One |location=Toronto |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-88784-248-1}} | |||
==References== | |||
] | |||
{{Reflist|32em}} | |||
==External links== | |||
* {{cite web |author=Manhattan Institute |author-link=Manhattan Institute |year=2007 |title=Manhattan Institute Scholar – David Gratzer |url=http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/gratzer.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070911182724/http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/gratzer.htm |archive-date=2007-09-11 }} | |||
* {{C-SPAN|9264036}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gratzer, David}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 15:52, 3 July 2024
David George Gratzer (born September 5, 1974) is a physician, columnist, author, Congressional expert witness; he was a senior fellow at both the Manhattan Institute and the Montreal Economic Institute. Though he has written essays on topics as diverse as obesity and political campaigns, he is best known for his first book, published by ECW Press, when he was just 24: Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System. That book won the Donner Prize established by the Donner Canadian Foundation and was a national bestseller in his native Canada. Gratzer is a critic of the Canadian health care system, and of U.S. President Barack Obama's health care reform proposals. Gratzer was health care policy advisor to Rudy Giuliani's 2008 presidential campaign.
Early life
Gratzer born September 5, 1974, in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Gratzer's father, George, is a professor of mathematics at the University of Manitoba who emigrated from Hungary to the United States in 1963 and to Canada in 1966. Gratzer's mother, Catherine, is a retired dentist. Gratzer's older brother earned his medical degree and now practices in the United States as a psychiatrist.
Gratzer earned a B.Sc. at the University of Manitoba in 1996, was president of the University of Manitoba Students' Union (UMSU) during his final undergraduate year 1995–1996, and was appointed by the Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba to the University of Manitoba Board of Governors for four successive years from 1994 to 1998.
In his early years, Gratzer was not particularly interested in health policy issues. As he noted later:
When I grew up in Canada, I was interested in getting into medical school. If you had stopped me on the street when I was 16 or 17 and asked me about the Medical College Admission Test, I could have given you a variety of very satisfying, unique statistics on admission rates and so on. I didn't give a lot of thought to health policy. When HillaryCare was debated in the United States, I remember vaguely thinking there was something good about the idea: After all, government should be involved in health care. I had never even been to Washington, D.C.
Medical school and Code Blue (1999)
Gratzer attended medical school at the University of Manitoba from 1996 to 2000 and earned an M.D. in 2000. On November 15, 1996, during his first year of medical school, the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) published a letter to the editor from Gratzer criticizing a June 15, 1996 CMAJ report comparing reserve funds held by the Canadian Medical Protective Association (CMPA) to those held by medical malpractice insurers in the United States.
While in medical school, Gratzer was a regular contributor of opinion columns to National Post, wrote a weekly opinion column for the London Free Press and the Halifax Sunday Herald, and wrote columns on health care that appeared in several major newspapers and magazines, including the Toronto Star and Ottawa Citizen and Calgary Herald. A 1997 Gratzer column "Being a young conservative is nothing to apologize for" said "I am a conservative. This is somewhat unfortunate, as people don't seem to understand how anyone under 40 can be right-wing." A 1999 Gratzer column "Raising the minimum wage hurts the poor it hopes to help" lamented that even "two of Canada's three right-leaning governments have chosen to hike their minimum wages" and that "minimum wage earners are not underpaid but underproductive" Gratzer won $250 as fourth place runner-up in 1998–1999 and won $2,500 as first prize in the 1999–2000 Felix Morley Journalism Competition of the Institute for Humane Studies at George Mason University for his newspaper columns.
During his second year of medical school, Gratzer began writing a book about problems with the Canadian health care system but could not get anyone interested. Rejection letters piled up after he completed the book and he had doubts about his ability to get taken seriously until his third year of medical school, when Robert Lecker, professor of English at McGill University and co-founder of ECW Press agreed to publish his book. In August 1999, during his fourth year of medical school, ECW Press published the 24-year-old Gratzer's first book, Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System
Gratzer wrote about deficiencies in Canadian health care and argued that they were the direct result of the system's design, and thus not amendable to simple reforms.
The magicians believe that, with just the right combination of government regulations, medicare will magically work. The spendthrifts argue that more government spending would solve every problem—from the attitude of the grumpiest hospital orderly to the lengthiest waiting list for radiation therapy… On the surface, they seem to have little in common. Both magicians and spendthrifts, however, believe in a government-run health care system. And while they don’t agree on the best way to reform medicare, they basically agree that government action will provide the solution.
Gratzer called for market-based reforms. He won praise from a former Member of Parliament, Stephen Harper, who wrote: "Gratzer proposes a workable solution for the biggest public policy problem of the coming generation—government-controlled health care monopoly… Canada needs Gratzer’s solution." Harper later became the Prime Minister of Canada.
On May 4, 2000, Gratzer was awarded $25,000 by the Donner Canadian Foundation as winner of its second annual Donner Prize for best public policy book of 1999 for Code Blue.
Residency and Better Medicine (2002)
In June 2000, Gratzer graduated from medical school and in July 2000 began a five-year psychiatry residency program at the University of Toronto. During his psychiatry residency, Gratzer continued to write newspaper opinion columns. A 2001 Gratzer column "Make room for prescription drug ads on television" advocated allowing direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs on television in Canada (the United States and New Zealand are the only countries that allow direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs).
In April 2002, ECW Press published Better Medicine: Reforming Canadian Health Care a book of essays edited by Gratzer. The collection of essays had 17 contributors from 3 countries and 2 continents. Essayists included historian Michael Bliss and columnist Margaret Wente. Dr. Victor Dirnfeld, a physician and former president of the Canadian Medical Association, wrote the introduction. Gratzer co-wrote an essay on market reforms seen in various European countries, and also wrote the concluding essay on medical savings accounts.
In September 2002, Gratzer was one of 25 Canadians under age 30 featured in a Maclean's "Leaders of Tomorrow" cover story. In 2002, while still a psychiatry resident, Gratzer joined the Manhattan Institute as a senior fellow.
In 2004, Gratzer was first author of a peer-reviewed brief report "Lifetime rates of alcoholism in adults with anxiety, depression, or co-morbid depression/anxiety: a community survey of Ontario" published in the Journal of Affective Disorders.
On June 28, 2005, Gratzer testified in support of H.R. 2355, the Health Care Choice Act of 2005, at a hearing of the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Health of the Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Independent practice and The Cure (2006)
On June 30, 2005, Gratzer completed his University of Toronto psychiatry residency and became registered for independent practice of medicine in Ontario. In April 2006, Gratzer became licensed to practice medicine in Pennsylvania. In May 2006, Gratzer became board-certified in psychiatry.
In October 2006, Encounter Books published Gratzer's book, The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care, about problems with the United States health care system.
The problem and the predicament of American health care can be stated in a single, paradoxical sentence: Everyone agrees that it’s the best in the world, but nobody really likes it. On the one hand, we are so blessed with medical breakthroughs that we take them virtually for granted. Cardiac care has been revolutionized in only a few short years; death due to cardiac disease has fallen by nearly two-thirds in the past five decades. Polio is confined to the history books. Childhood leukemia, once a death sentence, is almost always curable… Yet while the quality of American medicine has never been better, angst over American health care has never been greater. The state of Medicare, the cost of prescription drugs, and the numbers of uninsured are all considered crises.
The book advocated moving health-care decisions closer to individuals and their families. Gratzer cited health savings accounts as a success story and bemoaned the state of health care in countries with government-run systems. He advocated various reforms: Gratzer proposed turning over all current federal funding for Medicaid to state governments in the form of block grants to experiment with, using welfare reform as a model; tightening Medicaid eligibility for long-term care; expanding health savings accounts; and encouraging the purchase of private long term care insurance.
In the last chapter, he proposed more far-reaching reforms while acknowledging that neither political party would currently advocate them:
- "Making Health Insurance Portable": ending the tax exemption of employer-provided health insurance and scrapping government regulations mandating what conditions and whom and at what rates private health insurance companies must provide coverage, thereby making it easier for families to purchase health insurance through their employer, their union, or their church;
- "Shoring up Medicare": pre-funding the program (either through individual accounts or a trust fund), and raising the Medicare eligibility age to 70;
- "Creating a Market for Medical Progress": ending the FDA's requirement that drugs demonstrate "efficacy", and return to only requiring pre-marketing demonstration of safety.
The Foreword was written by Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman. He wrote: "David Gratzer is a practicing psychiatrist who combines firsthand knowledge of medical practice in both his native Canada and the U.S. with an independent point of view and a rare capacity for lucid exposition of complex technical material... If you want a well-written, interesting yet authoritative and thorough account of what is wrong with medicine today and how to cure American health care, this is the book for you."
The Cure was named a "Top Ten Reading Selection for 2007" by the National Chamber Foundation.
2008 campaign and beyond
On July 30, 2007, Rudy Giuliani's 2008 presidential campaign named Gratzer as one of his five key health care policy advisors, along with Hoover Institution senior fellow Dan Kessler, Hoover Institution senior fellow Scott Atlas, Pacific Research Institute president and CEO Sally Pipes, and The Moran Company founder and president Donald Moran. During the campaign, Giuliani championed interstate health-insurance markets and tax parity for non-employer purchases of health insurance, both positions favored by Gratzer.
Giuliani said that his chance of surviving prostate cancer was 82% in the US, but only 44% under socialized medicine in England. Giuliani got his facts from the Manhattan Institute, in an article by Gratzer. Many cancer experts said that Gratzer was wrong, because he incorrectly compared survival statistics. Gratzer responded by citing economist John Goodman, co-founder and president of the National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA), by economist June O'Neill, and by U.S. Constitutional historian and health policy expert Betsy McCaughey, a former John M. Olin fellow at the Manhattan Institute. Gratzer also cited a September 2007 Lancet Oncology article which he said found superior cancer outcomes in the United States for 16 cancers when compared to European countries.
After Giuliani withdrew, Gratzer endorsed the McCain health-care proposal.
Gratzer testified several times during the recent health-care reform debates, including before the House Budget and Ways and Means Committees. In a June 2009 U.S. Congressional hearing on the issue of single-payer health care, Gratzer and U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) clashed over Canadian healthcare statistics.
According to a June 29, 2009, front-page article in Canada's National Post, "armed with a stack of statistics about patient wait lists in Canada, and a fusillade of dire warnings about the life-threatening consequences of government-managed care," Gratzer "has emerged as the go-to expert witness for GOP lawmakers hoping to sow doubt in Congress about the wisdom of embracing Mr. Obama's call for a public health insurance option to compete with private insurers."
In July 2009, he appeared on 20/20 to discuss health care.
In November 2009, Encounter Books published a short book of his criticism of the White House plans, How Obama’s Government Takeover of Health Care Will Be a Disaster.
Gratzer continues to comment and debate on health-care issues. He is founding contributor to both FrumForum (formerly NewMajority) and the Canadian version of the Huffington Post. With former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, he debated at the Munk Debates.
More recent work has focused on obesity. In a widely reprinted Los Angeles Times piece, he argued that society was suffering from a McVictim Syndrome with "oo many pundits, public health experts and politicians are working overtime to find scapegoats for America's obesity epidemic." He rejects this: "governments can't micromanage your waistline for you. Even if governments could magically walk you to work, ban food advertising, regulate sugar out of food and suck those fat particles out of the air, in a free society you would still have the power to drive to the nearest restaurant, shake your salt shaker and order a second piece of pie. That's why understanding—and rejecting—the McVictim culture is crucial to obesity reduction policy."
Works
- Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System. Toronto: ECW Press. August 1999. ISBN 1-55022-393-3.
- Better Medicine: Reforming Canadian Health Care. Toronto: ECW Press. April 2002. ISBN 1-55022-505-7. (editor)
- The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care. New York: Encounter Books. October 2006. ISBN 1-59403-153-3. Paperback edition (May 2008) ISBN 1-59403-219-X.
- Griffiths, Rudyard, ed. (April 2009). "You want an Americanization of health care". American Myths: What Canadians Think They Know about the United States. Toronto: Key Porter Books. ISBN 978-1-55022-505-1.
- How Obama's Government Takeover of Health Care Will Be a Disaster. New York: Encounter Books. November 2009. ISBN 978-1-59403-460-2.
- Griffiths, Rudyard, ed. (November 2010). "Health Care". Munk Debates: Volume One. Toronto: House of Anansi. ISBN 978-0-88784-248-1.
References
- ^ Lumley, Elizabeth, ed. (2007). Canadian who's who (2007 ed., v. 42 ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 514. OCLC 2604443.
- Gratzer D. The Cure. Speech to the Heritage Foundation. 2006 October 18.
- Gratzer, David (November 15, 1996). "Drawing comparisons and conclusions between Canadian and US malpractice insurance". CMAJ. 155 (10): 1389–90. PMC 1335102. PMID 8943923.
- Korcok, Milan (November 15, 1996). "Author response to: Drawing comparisons and conclusions between Canadian and US malpractice insurance". CMAJ. 155 (10): 1390. PMC 1335102. PMID 8943923.
- Korcok, Milan (June 15, 1996). "CMPA not alone in pursuing huge reserves, CMAJ survey of US firms reveals". CMAJ. 154 (12): 1891–94. PMC 1487749. PMID 8653650.
- Gratzer, David (July 20, 1997). "Being a young conservative is nothing to apologize for". The Gazette. p. A9.
- Gratzer, David (January 2, 1999). "Raising the minimum wage hurts the poor it hopes to help: Cheap compassion comes with a significant cost". National Post. p. D08.
- ^ Aubin, Benoit; et al. (September 9, 2002). "Leaders of tomorrow: 25 Canadians under age 30". Maclean's. pp. 20–30.
- ^ Gratzer, David (August 1999). Code Blue: Reviving Canada's Health Care System. Toronto: ECW Press.
- Tertius (May 3, 2000). "Jumping the Donner Foundation's gun". The Globe and Mail. p. R2.
- Square, David (June 27, 2000). "Fourth-year medical student takes Donner Prize" (PDF). CMAJ. 162 (13): 1863.
- Gratzer, David (May 4, 2001). "Make room for prescription drug ads on television". The Ottawa Citizen. p. A15.
- Mintzes, Barbara (January 2006). Direct-to-Consumer Advertising of Prescription Drugs in Canada: What are the Public Health Implications? (PDF). Toronto: Health Council of Canada. ISBN 0-9739725-6-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-09-11. Retrieved 2009-07-17.
- Gratzer, David (November 1, 2002). "Universal Health Care Revived? The electoral stakes in Oregon". National Review Online.
- Gratzer, David; Levitan, Robert D.; Sheldon, Tess; Toneatto, Tony; Rector, Neil A.; Goering, Paula (April 2004). "Lifetime rates of alcoholism in adults with anxiety, depression, or co-morbid depression/anxiety: a community survey of Ontario". J Affect Disord. 79 (1–3): 209–15. doi:10.1016/S0165-0327(02)00355-5. PMID 15023496.
- Anonymous (June 30, 2005). "David George Gratzer - registration 75146". College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario.
- Anonymous (April 26, 2006). "David George Gratzer - license MD428922". Pennsylvania Department of State. Archived from the original on May 11, 2012. Retrieved July 18, 2019.
- Anonymous (May 14, 2006). "ABPN Congratulations - David George Gratzer" (PDF). American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 11, 2008. Retrieved July 24, 2008.
- ^ Gratzer, David (October 2006). The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care. New York: Encounter Books. ISBN 1-59403-153-3.
- "National Chamber Foundation". Archived from the original on 2011-05-23. Retrieved 2010-05-31.
- Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee, Inc. (July 30, 2007). "Rudy Giuliani campaign announces health care advisors". JoinRudy2008.com.
Tapper, Jake (July 30, 2007). "Giuliani gets healthy". ABCNews.com. - Where Would You Rather Be Sick? David Gratzer. City Journal. June 15, 2006
- Giuliani’s Prostate Cancer Figure Is Disputed, By JULIE BOSMAN, New York Times, OCT. 31, 2007
- THE CLAIM: GIULIANI'S PROGNOSIS WOULD BE WORSE IN BRITAIN. Washington Post, October 31, 2007
- A Bogus Cancer Statistic. Giuliani falsely claims that only 44 percent of prostate cancer patients survive under "socialized medicine" in England. By Lori Robertson. October 30, 2007
- ^ Gratzer, David (October 31, 2007). "Malignant rumor". City Journal Online. Manhattan Institute.
- Verdecchia, Arduino and the EUROCARE-4 Working Group; et al. (September 2007). "Recent cancer survival in Europe: a 2000–02 period analysis of EUROCARE-4 data". Lancet Oncology. 8 (9): 784–96. doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(07)70246-2. PMID 17714993.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Alberts, Sheldon (June 29, 2009). "Obama's foe a Canadian; Manitoba-born doctor is the Republican go-to expert on medicare". National Post. p. A1.
- "Video". ABC News.
External links
- Manhattan Institute (2007). "Manhattan Institute Scholar – David Gratzer". Archived from the original on 2007-09-11.
- Appearances on C-SPAN