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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: michael97123 who wrote (213238)1/16/2007 2:09:32 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 281500
 
NEWS: America’s Health Care is a National Disgrace
By Nick Gier, New West Unfiltered 1-09-07
newwest.net

AMERICA'S HEALTH CARE IS A NATIONAL DISGRACE
01-09-07
Nick Gier, Professor Emeritus, University of Idaho

President Bush frequently praises the American health care system as the best in the world, and many Americans spit out the two words "socialized medicine" as if they were poison.

But countries with single payer systems spend far less than we do, are much more satisfied with their care, and experience far better health than Americans do. Ranked according to 16 health categories, the U. S. is next to last among 13 industrialized nations.

In 2004 Americans paid $6,100 per person compared to an average $2,550 per capita in all other industrialized nations. A large portion of that cost was for drugs, with Americans paying twice as much than citizens of these countries.

Single payer systems are simply more efficient. Annual health administration costs in Canada, for example, are $300 per person versus $1,000 in the U.S. Administrative costs for Medicare are 2 percent as opposed to 13 percent taken by private insurance.

Another aspect of the large U. S. costs is the fact that American doctors make twice as much as other doctors do (an average $200,000 versus $100,000 per year). These doctors also start their careers with little or no debt, compared to American physicians, who start their careers with an average of $100,000 in outstanding loans.

With regard to health statistics, the most dramatic differences are found in teen STD rates. Five times more Americans 15-24 have HIV than German youth of that age. The U.S. teen syphilis rate is six times than of the Netherlands, and our teen gonorrhea rate is a whopping 74 times higher than the Dutch.

Governmental programs that provide uncensored sex education and promote condom use are the key to this success in youth sexual health. Contrary to what one might expect, European youth have fewer sex partners than Americans do and begin sex slightly later than Americans.

The U.S. infant mortality rate is 5 babies per 1,000 as opposed to 2 per 1,000 in the Czech Republic, Finland, Iceland, and Norway. The rate of 9 African American infants per 1,000 approaches third world countries. In 2005, more babies per 1,000 survived in Cuba than in America.

America would do much better in this category if it could provide prenatal care to all of its citizens. Studies have shown that for every $1 spent on prenatal care, $3 is saved by preventing complications of unsupervised pregnancies.

Although other countries are catching up, Americans are still by far the most overweight, impacting health costs significantly. For every three Americans who are obese, only one Dane is, even with a diet heavy in dairy products.

A recent study of illness in the U.S. and Great Britain found that in every major category, Americans were sicker than their British counterparts. There were twice as many American diabetics, and the American cancer rate was 4 percent higher.

The study was adjusted for ethnic diversity, so two reasons where given for the disparity. First, there is much more obesity in America; and second, there is much more stress due to economic and health insecurity, especially among the 46 million without health insurance.

Those who demonize socialized medicine have the misconception that the people who have it do not like it. Surveys in the late 1990s, however, indicated that only the Italians at 20 percent were more dissatisfied than Americans at 40 percent. Danes were 91 percent satisfied; Finns, 81 percent; French, 65 percent; Swedes and British, 57 percent.

A common response to European success is that they are homogenous societies with few ethnic divisions. Germans, however, have been living with a large Turkish minority for decades, and other European countries have taken large numbers of refugees in the last 20 years. Denmark has received more per capita than any other country in the world.

As the new Democratic Congress convenes, it should consider legislation that will move the U.S. to a single payer system as soon as it is feasible. The savings in administrative costs alone would, using 2001 figures, easily covering all the 46 million uninsured. I support Princeton economist Paul Krugman's proposal to extend Medicare to every American.

Nick Gier taught philosophy at the University of Idaho for 31 years. His other columns can be read or heard at nickgier.com.



To: michael97123 who wrote (213238)1/26/2007 10:46:14 AM
From: Rainy_Day_Woman  Respond to of 281500
 
I would say very failed, cuba

I think the US embargo will be lifted when fidel dies

personally, I think the US should back out of international affairs and let other countries nudge, push, discuss, finance and fight through issues, with the US taking a large back seat - little nods of approval and disapproval

and concentrate our monies and efforts on the US issues - of which we have a small mountain

focus on our strengths, improve and become stronger financially

if certain areas self destruct, they self destruct