Thursday, May 5, 2011

THE REALITY OF HEALTH CARE IN AMERICA

“Sign the petition; let’s stop Obama care before it does irreparable damage to America”


That is what the ad says where Mikie Hucklebee is urging Americans to stop Obama care. It is ludicrous it is almost laughable. As if our health care system wasn’t fucked up enough already and what is there to save? The profits of the Insurance companies…that is what.

We look at other nations with far less resources than ours and they are surpassing us not only in the amounts they spend on healthcare but also on the quality. The U.S. has slipped to a number never seen when compared to other countries.

Here is an article from the Daily Koss by by Joan McCarter

Healthcare spending in US dwarfs the OECD

“Via Ezra Klein, why the nation has to get serious, and fast, about real healthcare reform (and that doesn't include Medicare vouchers or Medicaid block grants). The Kaiser Family Foundation has a new report comparing healthcare costs—and the growth of those costs—in the U.S. and selected OECD countries. The bottom line:

It is reasonably well known that the United States spends more per capita on health care than other countries. What may be less well known is that the United States still has one of the highest growth rates in health care spending. Health care spending around the world is generally rising faster than overall economic growth, so almost all countries have seen health care spending increase as a percentage of their gross domestic product (GDP) over time. In the United States, which has both a high level of health spending per capita and a relatively high rate of real growth in spending, the share of GDP devoted to health care spending grew from 9% of GDP in 1980 to 16% of GDP in 2008. This 7 percentage-point increase in health spending as a share of GDP is one of the largest across the OECD.

Ezra reiterates what exactly that means: "[U.S] spending has been growing much faster than everyone else’s, and is now so high that our government spends more on health care than the governments of countries with single-payer systems—and that’s true even though most of our health-care spending is private!" He pulls three graphs to illustrate.

Here’s what we spend vs. what everyone else spends:

And here’s the growth in that spending over time. Note that in the 1970s, we were approximately equal to the rest of the world. It’s really in the ’80s and ’90s that the gap between us and everyone else opened up:

...But perhaps the piece de resistance is this chart, showing the percentage of gross domestic product that countries spend on private and public health-care expenditures. The United States spends more through the government than — deep breath — Japan, Australia, Norway, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, Canada or Switzerland:

In other words, we’re spending more on government-provided health care than most countries where government-provided health care is pretty much all there is.

And we all know that outcomes are not matching expenditures. In 2000, the World Health Organization ranked the U.S. 37th in the world. In 2006, "the United States was number 1 in terms of health care spending per capita but ranked 39th for infant mortality, 43rd for adult female mortality, 42nd for adult male mortality, and 36th for life expectancy."

That picture isn't improving, and won't if the only solution our lawmakers can come up with is slashing healthcare services to the most vulnerable populations”.

But you tell these Republican-Teahadists and it is like speaking to your kitchen table…they will not listen to reason, you show them the statistics, drown them with facts and charts and they will still cling to that idea that we have the best health care system in the world and that the insurance companies should continue to make a profit out of people’s misery.



Amazingly, with all the evidence that our health care system is bad enough, the Republican-Teahadists now want to make it even worse…they are hell-bent on eliminating Medicare and Medicaid…Do you know where America will then be in terms of health care as compared to the rest of the world? I don’t know and I don’t even want to think about it; but it will be right along very poor third world country…we bight be competing with Haiti and Somalia for the dubious last place.

SOURCE: http://www.dailykos.com/


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