Sunday, September 16, 2007

Guardian Article on Health Care in the U.S.

"Expensive and divisive: how America is losing patience with a failing system / Onus on workers to buy health insurance as rising costs force firms to end perk"

The US spends about 16% of GDP on healthcare, a proportion expected to climb to 20% by 2015, according to the National Coalition on Health Care. At present spending levels of $1.6 trillion a year, which works out at $6,700 per capita, is double what is spent in countries such as France. And yet that still leaves some 47 million Americans entirely without health coverage, and tens of millions of others under-insured, according to latest census figures.

It also fails to guarantee a better service to those Americans with access to healthcare. The US ranks last or near the bottom on quality, access, efficiency, equity and healthy lives, according to a report in May 2007 from the Commonwealth Fund, which studies healthcare.

"The US healthcare system is considered a dysfunctional mess," writes Ezekial Emanuel, chairman of the department of clinical bioethics, in a recent issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. . . .

Full article here. I found this paragraph telling:

However, the US has - with [the British] government's encouragement - made inroads here. United Health, a US healthcare provider based in Minneapolis, arrived in the UK in 2004 to develop a scheme which had succeeded in keeping frail and elderly people out of hospital in the US, although an evaluation in November showed it had reduced neither the number of admissions nor deaths.

(But I'll bet you the company made money on the "scheme" nonetheless.)

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