November 2, 2007
Prostates and Prejudices
By PAUL KRUGMAN
“My chance of surviving prostate cancer — and thank God I was cured of it — in the United States? Eighty-two percent,” says Rudy Giuliani in a new radio ad attacking Democratic plans for universal health care. “My chances of surviving prostate cancer in England? Only 44 percent, under socialized medicine.”
It would be a stunning comparison if it were true. But it isn’t. And thereby hangs a tale — one of scare tactics, of the character of a man who would be president and, I’m sorry to say, about what’s wrong with political news coverage.
Let’s start with the facts: Mr. Giuliani’s claim is wrong on multiple levels — bogus numbers wrapped in an invalid comparison embedded in a smear.
Mr. Giuliani got his numbers from a recent article in City Journal, a publication of the conservative Manhattan Institute. The author gave no source for his numbers on five-year survival rates — the probability that someone diagnosed with prostate cancer would still be alive five years after the diagnosis. And they’re just wrong.
You see, the actual survival rate in Britain is 74.4 percent. That still looks a bit lower than the U.S. rate, but the difference turns out to be mainly a statistical illusion. The details are technical, but the bottom line is that a man’s chance of dying from prostate cancer is about the same in Britain as it is in America.
So Mr. Giuliani’s supposed killer statistic about the defects of
“socialized medicine” is entirely false. In fact, there’s very little
evidence that Americans get better health care than the British, which
is amazing given the fact that Britain spends only 41 percent as much
on health care per person as we do.
Anyway, comparisons with Britain have absolutely nothing to do with
what the Democrats are proposing. In Britain, doctors are government
employees; despite what Mr. Giuliani is suggesting, none of the
Democratic candidates have proposed to make American doctors work for
the government.
As a fact-check in The Washington Post put it: “The Clinton
health care plan” — which is very similar to the Edwards and Obama
plans — “has more in common with the Massachusetts plan signed into law
by Gov. Mitt Romney than the British National Health system.” Of
course, this hasn’t stopped Mr. Romney from making similar smears.
At one level, what Mr. Giuliani and Mr. Romney are doing here
is engaging in time-honored scare tactics. For generations,
conservatives have denounced every attempt to ensure that Americans
receive needed health care, from Medicare to S-chip, as “socialized
medicine.”
Part of the strategy has always involved claiming that health
reform is suspect because it’s un-American, and exaggerating health
care problems in other countries — usually on the basis of
unsubstantiated anecdotes or fraudulent statistics. Opponents of reform
also make a practice of lumping all forms of government intervention
together, pretending that having the government pay some health care
bills is just the same as having the government take over the whole
health care system.
But here’s what I don’t understand: Why isn’t Mr. Giuliani’s behavior here
considered not just a case of bad policy anualysis but a character issue?
For better or (mostly) for worse, political reporting is dominated by
the search for the supposedly revealing incident, in which the
candidate says or does something that reveals his true character. And
this incident surely seems to fit the bill.
Leave aside the fact that Mr. Giuliani is simply lying about
what the Democrats are proposing; after all, Mitt Romney is doing the
same thing.
But health care is the pre-eminent domestic issue for the 2008
election. Surely the American people deserve candidates who do their
homework on the subject.
Yet what we actually have is the front-runner for the
Republican nomination apparently basing his health-care views on
something he read somewhere, which he believed without double-checking
because it confirmed his prejudices.
By rights, then, Mr. Giuliani’s false claims about prostate
cancer — which he has, by the way, continued to repeat, along with some
fresh false claims about breast cancer — should be a major political
scandal. As far as I can tell, however, they aren’t being treated that
way.
To be fair, there has been some news coverage of the prostate
affair. But it’s only a tiny fraction of the coverage received by
Hillary’s laugh and John Edwards’s haircut.
And much of the coverage seems weirdly diffident. Memo to editors:
If a candidate says something completely false, it’s not “in dispute.”
It’s not the case that “Democrats say” they’re not advocating
British-style socialized medicine; they aren’t.
The fact is that the prostate affair is part of a pattern: Mr.
Giuliani has a habit of saying things, on issues that range from health
care to national security, that are demonstrably untrue. And the
American people have a right to know that.