Re: The Healing of America --Meeting Presentation
Posted: Tue Oct 22, 2013 6:32 pm
Sick in America
Excerpt:
Much of what we hear about health care is pure propaganda with no basis whatsoever in fact. The purpose of propaganda is to manipulate, not to enlighten or inform, so it's no surprise that the partisan fight over health care in Congress has generated more heat than light. The baleful effect is to deceive and thereby perpetuate the status quo—and an ever-greater inequality that threatens to destroy the fabric of our society.
Among the false impressions created by libertarians, FOX news, and reactionaries of all stripes is that Americans far more freedom to choose physicians, hospitals and treatments than people in Europe and other advanced societies with single payer systems. Most anyone who has lived abroad and experienced a single-payer system in operation knows that's simply not true. Nor is it true that people in these countries get less personalized attention from doctors than we do. (Ask anybody who's spent a few days in a hospital lately how much time the doctor spent with them.) It's what the Corporatocracy tells us, and many of us are only too eager to believe, but it's not true.
The U.S. is NOT the leader in health care in the modern world.
In fact, the U.S. is not even in the top ten. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the health care system in the U.S. ranked thirty-eighth in the world in 2000. If you're thinking that was over a decade ago, maybe we're doing better now, think again.
Americans DO NOT LIVE LONGER than people in many other advanced countries.
Don't trust UN figures? How about Bloomberg? According to a Bloomberg study of the most efficient health systems in the world, the U.S. ranks forty-sixth, just below Iran (oops!) and just above Serbia. Among the top ten (Hong Kong, Singapore Japan, Israel, Spain, Italy, Australia, South Korea, Switzerland, and Sweden), life expectancy is significantly higher (and infant mortality is lower), as it is in the UK, Austria, Canada, France, Finland, the Netherlands, Portugal, Greece and Germany, among others. Amazingly, getting better results costs a lot less in these countries than we have to shell out.
Medical treatment in the U.S. is BY FAR THE MOST EXPENSIVE in the world.
Health care costs in US account for over 17 percent of total GDP every year—roughly $2.7 trillion in 2012. By itself, that's a very big number, as big as the entire GDP of France and bigger than Brazil's, but it takes on a whole new meaning when compared to what people in other advanced societies spend on health care and what they get in return. Among the top ten most efficient health care systems in the world, health care costs as a percentage of GDP ranges from a low of 3.8 percent in Singapore to a high of 11.5 percent in Switzerland. The average for the top 25 countries, all of which rank above the U.S. in health care efficiency, is 6.54 percent. That's 6.54 percent of GDP for a better result than we get in the U.S. spending 17.2 percent of GDP."
The American health care system IS NOT A FREE MARKET.... [snip]
Prescription drug prices in the U.S. are the HIGHEST IN THE WORLD.... [snip]
Conclusion #1: There's no perfect health care system anywhere in the world, and whether the best system possible is one that is state-funded or market-based is debatable.
Conclusion #2: "Among advanced economies, the U.S. spends the most on health care on a relative cost basis with the worst outcome." Bloomberg
Conclusion #3: The U.S. health-care system combines the worst features of both state-funded and market-based systems with none of the advantages of either.
The rest: http://www.nationofchange.org/sick-amer ... 1382361276
Excerpt:
Much of what we hear about health care is pure propaganda with no basis whatsoever in fact. The purpose of propaganda is to manipulate, not to enlighten or inform, so it's no surprise that the partisan fight over health care in Congress has generated more heat than light. The baleful effect is to deceive and thereby perpetuate the status quo—and an ever-greater inequality that threatens to destroy the fabric of our society.
Among the false impressions created by libertarians, FOX news, and reactionaries of all stripes is that Americans far more freedom to choose physicians, hospitals and treatments than people in Europe and other advanced societies with single payer systems. Most anyone who has lived abroad and experienced a single-payer system in operation knows that's simply not true. Nor is it true that people in these countries get less personalized attention from doctors than we do. (Ask anybody who's spent a few days in a hospital lately how much time the doctor spent with them.) It's what the Corporatocracy tells us, and many of us are only too eager to believe, but it's not true.
The U.S. is NOT the leader in health care in the modern world.
In fact, the U.S. is not even in the top ten. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the health care system in the U.S. ranked thirty-eighth in the world in 2000. If you're thinking that was over a decade ago, maybe we're doing better now, think again.
Americans DO NOT LIVE LONGER than people in many other advanced countries.
Don't trust UN figures? How about Bloomberg? According to a Bloomberg study of the most efficient health systems in the world, the U.S. ranks forty-sixth, just below Iran (oops!) and just above Serbia. Among the top ten (Hong Kong, Singapore Japan, Israel, Spain, Italy, Australia, South Korea, Switzerland, and Sweden), life expectancy is significantly higher (and infant mortality is lower), as it is in the UK, Austria, Canada, France, Finland, the Netherlands, Portugal, Greece and Germany, among others. Amazingly, getting better results costs a lot less in these countries than we have to shell out.
Medical treatment in the U.S. is BY FAR THE MOST EXPENSIVE in the world.
Health care costs in US account for over 17 percent of total GDP every year—roughly $2.7 trillion in 2012. By itself, that's a very big number, as big as the entire GDP of France and bigger than Brazil's, but it takes on a whole new meaning when compared to what people in other advanced societies spend on health care and what they get in return. Among the top ten most efficient health care systems in the world, health care costs as a percentage of GDP ranges from a low of 3.8 percent in Singapore to a high of 11.5 percent in Switzerland. The average for the top 25 countries, all of which rank above the U.S. in health care efficiency, is 6.54 percent. That's 6.54 percent of GDP for a better result than we get in the U.S. spending 17.2 percent of GDP."
The American health care system IS NOT A FREE MARKET.... [snip]
Prescription drug prices in the U.S. are the HIGHEST IN THE WORLD.... [snip]
Conclusion #1: There's no perfect health care system anywhere in the world, and whether the best system possible is one that is state-funded or market-based is debatable.
Conclusion #2: "Among advanced economies, the U.S. spends the most on health care on a relative cost basis with the worst outcome." Bloomberg
Conclusion #3: The U.S. health-care system combines the worst features of both state-funded and market-based systems with none of the advantages of either.
The rest: http://www.nationofchange.org/sick-amer ... 1382361276