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ck4829

(35,042 posts)
Sat Nov 26, 2022, 07:44 AM Nov 2022

The US Spends Almost as Much on Healthcare as the Rest of the World Combined and Has One of the

The US Spends Almost as Much on Healthcare as the Rest of the World Combined and Has One of the Worst Outcomes

Health can be a complicated matter within a society. For example, the United States spends almost as much as the entire world combined on health care, yet millions remain uninsured and drowning in medical debt. To help understand this, Scheer Intelligence host Robert Scheer welcomes Dr. Stephen Bezruchka, a former emergency physician, current scholar of the impact of economic inequity on health, and author of “Inequality Kills Us All: COVID-19’s Health Lessons for the World.”

Dr. Bezruchka’s journey through some of the country’s most elite universities including Harvard, Stanford and Johns Hopkins landed him in a position to study medicine not only in the field but in the macroeconomic sense as well. In the 1970s, he worked as an emergency physician in the U.S. and taught medicine in Nepal, setting up a community health project there. Since then, he’s worked with Physicians for Social Responsibility, the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize winner, and drawing attention to socioeconomic factors affecting the health of societies.

He points out that in the 1950s, life expectancy in the U.S. was within the top five or ten healthiest countries in the world. But other countries began surpassing us. By 1970, the U.S. ranked 17th, dropping to 22nd by the early ‘90s, and more recent data has the U.S. ranked as 44th. “That is, among UN countries, which doesn’t include Taiwan and Monaco and other small populations, there are 43 countries where people live longer lives” he said.

His new book explores just how deadly inequality can be to humanity and explores how even the smallest of policy changes, like parental leave, can make a huge impact on the long-term health of an individual’s life. “Only two countries in the world with a population of a million or more don’t provide (paid) time off to parents after you have your baby. So that is really important. Why do we not have a paid parental leave act in this country?… And this is for the richest, most powerful country in world history,” Dr. Bezruchka said.

https://scheerpost.com/2022/11/25/the-us-spends-almost-as-much-on-healthcare-as-the-rest-of-the-world-combined-and-has-one-of-the-worst-outcomes/

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The US Spends Almost as Much on Healthcare as the Rest of the World Combined and Has One of the (Original Post) ck4829 Nov 2022 OP
Byzantine, expensive US system this way by counter-productive ideological Republican design Bernardo de La Paz Nov 2022 #1
Gun deaths and anti-abortion laws have a huge impact JT45242 Nov 2022 #2
Having health care and retirement benefits tied to employment is absurd. twodogsbarking Nov 2022 #3

Bernardo de La Paz

(48,988 posts)
1. Byzantine, expensive US system this way by counter-productive ideological Republican design
Sat Nov 26, 2022, 07:54 AM
Nov 2022

Because Republicans refuse to support any tax-paid healing.
They are so stupidly ideological, they cut off their nose to spite their face.

Hurt people hurt people.

When hurt people hurt people, productivity drops, discord increases and Republicans make less money. Except they can't see that because they are blinded by their ideology.

Their ideology makes the unempathic as well.

Countries that have universal health care and happy work forces due to labour laws are very productive and wealthy and wonderful places to live.

RepubliConners: putting the idiot in ideological.

JT45242

(2,259 posts)
2. Gun deaths and anti-abortion laws have a huge impact
Sat Nov 26, 2022, 08:14 AM
Nov 2022

No country not at war comes anywhere near the number of gun deaths that we have...which often affect young (40 and under) deaths.

Yes health care is a major problem and should be fixed. But our low life expectancy is a multidimensional problem.

twodogsbarking

(9,725 posts)
3. Having health care and retirement benefits tied to employment is absurd.
Sat Nov 26, 2022, 08:58 AM
Nov 2022

Employers (especially Republicans) hate it and employees are held prisoner.
Seems like everyone except big business hates it but yet it continues. Absurd.

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