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US ranks last in Healthcare
Congratulation American's your healthcare is the worse out of the top 19 industrialized nations'.
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Tue Jan 8, 2:13 PM ET France is tops, and the United States dead last, in providing timely and effective healthcare to its citizens, according to a survey Tuesday of preventable deaths in 19 industrialized countries. The study by the Commonwealth Fund and published in the January/February issue of the journal Health Affairs measured developed countries' effectiveness at providing timely and effective healthcare. The study, entitled "Measuring the Health of Nations: Updating an Earlier Analysis," was written by researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. It looked at death rates in subjects younger than 75 that could have been prevented by timely and effective medical care. The researchers found that while most countries surveyed saw preventable deaths decline by an average of 16 percent, the United States saw only a four percent dip. The non-profit Commonwealth Fund, which financed the study, expressed alarm at the findings. "It is startling to see the US falling even farther behind on this crucial indicator of health system performance," said Commonwealth Fund Senior Vice President Cathy Schoen, who noted that "other countries are reducing these preventable deaths more rapidly, yet spending far less." The 19 countries, in order of best to worst, were: France, Japan, Australia, Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. Some countries showed dramatic improvement in the periods studied -- 1997 and 1998 and again between 2002 and 2003 -- outpacing the United States, which showed only slight improvement. White the United States ranked 15th of 19 between 1997-98, by 2002-03 it had fallen to last place. "It is notable that all countries have improved substantially except the US," said Ellen Nolte, lead author of the study. Had the United States performed as well as any of the top three industrialized countries, there would have been 101,000 fewer deaths per year, the researchers said. |
Ballin'!
/ lim f(x) = lim f(a) 
edit: Broken link, mate.
Here is the fixed link plus some more data:http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2008010...1uDKexfOGOs0NUE
http://www.commonwealthfund.org/pub...m?doc_id=640980


Sorry dude, but simple bar graphs can't portray an entire medical system, or compare it to others. Methods of reporting, population demographics, inborn disease and patient characteristics all play a role. If it makes people feel better to say that the US health system sucks, good for them. But these reports continue to be analogous to posting a chart that says Stephen Hawking can't jump as high as Michael Jordan. Without context and understanding there is no usable information.
Again though, carry on with the disdain for the American healthcare system. I guess I hope you never get sick if it's really that bad.
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Originally posted by NeoPhono Sorry dude, but simple bar graphs can't portray an entire medical system, or compare it to others. Methods of reporting, population demographics, inborn disease and patient characteristics all play a role. If it makes people feel better to say that the US health system sucks, good for them. But these reports continue to be analogous to posting a chart that says Stephen Hawking can't jump as high as Michael Jordan. Without context and understanding there is no usable information.Again though, carry on with the disdain for the American healthcare system. I guess I hope you never get sick if it's really that bad. |
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| Originally posted by guerra-monstru Cheers mate, my point was that publicly funded healthcare leads to healthier populations and it's fairer, you can have private providers though like in most of Europe, I don't want a system like the US where they spend double the amount per head of any other nation and get worse results and the doctors become doctors to make a fortune and not care about the patients. It is a fact that the majority of American doctors have a messed up mentality not all but many |
I'm one who is angry we have money for aircraft carrier groups in the Persian Gulf, but not enough to take care of just the basic necessities of our own people. I'm disgusted...
My own personal circumstance might influence that, as I can't get sick because I can't afford health insurance, nor can I rely on anything but student loans and shitty ass scholarships to go to post-secondary schools...
Say what you what about socialized medicine but at least we have health insurance and we like it that way.
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| Originally posted by NeoPhono Please, for the love of God, don't blame doctors for why the US health care system is screwed up. They had a part in it in the 50's and 60's, but you can't hold today's doctors accountable for previous physicians, bad legislation, unhealthy lifestyles and misplaced priorities. |
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| Originally posted by guerra-monstru you just don't get it do you? |
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| Originally posted by NeoPhono LOL, no...please explain. |
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| Originally posted by Lira Ballin'! / lim f(x) = lim f(a) ![]() |
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| Originally posted by guerra-monstru I just can't it pains me to explain this. |
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| Originally posted by NeoPhono You should see a doctor about that. |
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| Originally posted by guerra-monstru I can't I would be too ashamed about that. Spoil the reputation of my family etc etc. |
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| Originally posted by guerra-monstru you just don't get it do you? |
Ok here are a little more FACTS but feel to ignore the facts.
Its from the ECONOMIST handbook 2007
Highest health spending % of GDP
1. United States 15.2%
2. Switzerland 11.5%
3. Germany 11.1%
4. Cambodia 10.9%
5. Iceland 10.5%
6. Norway 10.3%
7. Lebanon 10.2%
8. France 10.1%
9. Canada/Greece 9.9%
11. Netherlands/Uruguay 9.8%
Now think about this. 30% of that is due to administrative waste (different plans different forms different paperwork). In a unified system, that is about 10% at most. So, immediate YOU could save a whopping 3% of YOUR GDP (a very non-trivial 400 BILLION dollars a year). Then, if pharmaceuticals were reigned in, this could bring perhaps even another 3% of savings.
Pharmaceutical companies spend more in advertising (which coincidently heavily regulated in Europe, and direct-to-patient advertising BANNED GET THAT BANNED in some countries) than they do on research, and then moan how they need to rob average John Q. Public to recoup their losses. Meanwhile on the backs of DEAD Americans they are among the most disgustingly profitable industries in the US.
Since you seem to like the Economist...
http://www.economist.com/finance/di...tory_id=9407716
You're telling me a completely government-run system would be less regulatory and more cost effective? Show me one other US agency that takes care of the entire population on a daily basis and runs in a cost-effective manner. Show me any US agency that runs in a cost effective manner. Show me a socialized medical system that is not currently facing, or forecasting horrific budget shortfalls or is delivering sub-standard care.
Here's the bottom line...until the field of medicine has unlimited resources, there will *always* be short comings. It's a matter of distributing resources. Unless a country is willing to put all of its GDP into health, there will always be a limit to how good healthcare can be.
Does that mean the US should maintain their current route? No. But that also doesn't mean the US would be successful in having a socialized healthcare system. There are a multitude of factors as to that, even beyond economics. I'm not saying there couldn't be a *universal* healthcare system, but that there shouldn't be one run by the government.
What should happen?
1. Americans should take better care of themselves. An obese patient (30% of the population) costs more than four times the amount of a non-obese individual for healthcare. Want even less incentive for the US to lose weight? Make care for all their weight-related ailments free.
2. Make insurance companies non-profit, allow nation-wide competition.
3. Reduce all government regulation; from insurance companies to the FDA. Why are drug costs so high? Well, the 1 billion dollar price tag for each newly approved drug helps. Add that to the fact that since most European countries and Canada set their drug prices, the recoup comes almost straight from the US. The nearly $400 billion in regulatory costs don't help keep the price of healthcare down, either.
4. Get rid of EMTALA.
5. Somehow impress upon the population the importance of, and responsibility needed to individually manage, healthcare. I'm still disgusted that people see healthcare costs as too high, while at the same time they're more than willing to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for cars, houses, electronics, vacations, etc. Without your health, everything else is meaningless, yet it always seems to be too expensive. Beyond that, if you are expecting to receive top of the line care, with the latest technology, when and how you need it, it's going to be expensive. That *is* simple economics.
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| Originally posted by NeoPhono Since you seem to like the Economist... http://www.economist.com/finance/di...tory_id=9407716 You're telling me a completely government-run system would be less regulatory and more cost effective? Show me one other US agency that takes care of the entire population on a daily basis and runs in a cost-effective manner. Show me any US agency that runs in a cost effective manner. Show me a socialized medical system that is not currently facing, or forecasting horrific budget shortfalls or is delivering sub-standard care. Here's the bottom line...until the field of medicine has unlimited resources, there will *always* be short comings. It's a matter of distributing resources. Unless a country is willing to put all of its GDP into health, there will always be a limit to how good healthcare can be. |
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Does that mean the US should maintain their current route? No. But that also doesn't mean the US would be successful in having a socialized healthcare system. There are a multitude of factors as to that, even beyond economics. I'm not saying there couldn't be a *universal* healthcare system, but that there shouldn't be one run by the government. What should happen? 1. Americans should take better care of themselves. An obese patient (30% of the population) costs more than four times the amount of a non-obese individual for healthcare. Want even less incentive for the US to lose weight? Make care for all their weight-related ailments free. |
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2. Make insurance companies non-profit, allow nation-wide competition. |
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3. Reduce all government regulation; from insurance companies to the FDA. Why are drug costs so high? Well, the 1 billion dollar price tag for each newly approved drug helps. Add that to the fact that since most European countries and Canada set their drug prices, the recoup comes almost straight from the US. The nearly $400 billion in regulatory costs don't help keep the price of healthcare down, either. |
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4. Get rid of EMTALA. |
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5. Somehow impress upon the population the importance of, and responsibility needed to individually manage, healthcare. I'm still disgusted that people see healthcare costs as too high, while at the same time they're more than willing to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for cars, houses, electronics, vacations, etc. Without your health, everything else is meaningless, yet it always seems to be too expensive. Beyond that, if you are expecting to receive top of the line care, with the latest technology, when and how you need it, it's going to be expensive. That *is* simple economics. |
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| Originally posted by guerra-monstru So what were the reforms the state of New York did in the 90's? And does smoking and drinking help? |
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| How exactly would this work with current insurance? |
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| Wait, you are blaming European nations for the price of drugs? How do many of the best pharmaceutucal companies come from Switzerland where taxes are high? Perhaps it would best if government didn't allow for such an easy access to medications that could cause harm to them, such as aspirin? Many American's die from aspirin this is because of the drug companies spending billion's of dollars a year on advertising. It has created a populace that constantly turns to taking medication on their own without realizing the consequences of it. Also if the drug companies are spending less on advertising than perhaps they could spend more on R & D which makes up just 7% of a corporations spending. Most drug companies spend more than 7% on advertising....it is true. |
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| What is this? |
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| Can I ask you a personal question are you involved in administration of a hospital? Also, I'd like to know where you stand on the fact that drug companies spend more of their money on advertising than r&d? Also where do you stand on care for terminal patients, such as people with the AIDS virus? do you think they deserve to be treated by doctors without expecting a returned profit or giving them the HAART treatment for free? Im just wondering also if a hospital has to treat someone who is terminally ill or seriously ill do you believe they should be treated and that the hospital (sometimes)shouldn't expect any money back? |
You guys have no idea how powerful the insurance and pharmaceutical companies are. Lobbyists have Washington on a leash.
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| Originally posted by Krypton You guys have no idea how powerful the insurance and pharmaceutical companies are. Lobbyists have Washington on a leash. |
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| Originally posted by NeoPhono 4. Get rid of EMTALA. |
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| I mean, people have access to health care in America. After all, you just go to an emergency room. |
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| Originally posted by guerra-monstru Cheers mate, my point was that publicly funded healthcare leads to healthier populations |
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