A report out Thursday shows that the United States’ for-profit healthcare system still ranks dead last among peer nations on key metrics, including access to care and health outcomes such as life expectancy at birth.
The new analysis from the Commonwealth Fund is the latest indictment of a corporate-dominated system that leaves tens of millions of people uninsured or underinsured and unable to afford life-saving medications without rationing doses or going into debt.
“Despite spending a lot on healthcare, the United States is not meeting one of the principal obligations of a nation: to protect the health and welfare of its residents,” the report states. “Most of the countries we compared are providing this protection, even though each can learn a good deal from its peers. The U.S., in failing this ultimate test of a successful nation, remains an outlier.”
People in the U.S., which spends roughly twice as much per capita on healthcare as other rich nations, “live the shortest lives and have the most avoidable deaths,” Commonwealth noted, pointing to frequent “denials of services by insurance companies” and other systematic defects of the American system, […]
Not surprised. When I was surprised by health care systems was when I lived in Europe. The EU population tended have been involved in herbals and homeopathy for a long long time before the states. That was apparent when costs for alternative medicine were covered by insurance.
Many Americans have very bad diets, and need more exercise. Most European cities are walkable and lots of them bicycle. I agree with what you’re saying, but healthcare starts with selfcare. Very few Europeans eat frozen or canned foods. I think that currently, there are other important factors at play.. and #1 is gun violence. And poor education As you now i lived and traveled in europe for several years. I rarely saw Europeans watching television. Altho i England the BBC has great shows.
Sorry for grammar and spelling. Am in MX. and the connectivity has issues.