(REPORT) US spends most but has worst health


The following is an excerpt from The Vaccine Reaction.

Despite the United States spending twice as much money on health care, the health of Americans is worse than other high income nations in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), according to a 2023 report by the Commonwealth Fund. 

In 2021, the U.S. expenditure for health care was $11,912 per person. Germany was next on the list with $7,382 spent per person, and South Korea had the lowest expenditure per person at $3,914.

The report looked in depth at the health care expenditures for twelve developed high income countries, including Canada, Australia, Japan, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, South Korea, Sweden, Norway, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Comparing the U.S. to the average of 38 high income countries in the OECD, the health of people living in the U.S. is the worst.

The U.S. had the lowest life expectancy at birth; highest infant and maternal death rate; highest death rate from avoidable causes; highest obesity rate, along with the highest rate of multiple chronic diseases among these countries.

One of the findings in the report is that Americans saw doctors less often than people did in other countries and spent more money when they did.

Out of the 12 developed countries studied, the U.S. was the only one that did not have universal health care coverage. In 2021, it was estimated that about 8.6 percent of Americans did not have health care insurance.

Health spending increased in all counties since the Covid-19 pandemic, but the cost increase was far higher in the U.S. In 2021, the U.S. spent 17.8 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) on health care. This is twice as much as Germany, which was the second highest spender, spending four times as much as South Korea, and twice as much as the average of all countries studied.

Americans Have Highest Infant and Maternal Mortality Rates and Lowest Life Expectancy

In 2020, life expectancy in the U.S. was 77 years, which is three years lower than the average of the other countries. Avoidable deaths, which means that there is treatment and prevention available for the condition that caused the death, was the highest in the U.S compared to the other countries.

Maternal mortality rates in the U.S. continue to be the highest of all the countries studied with almost 24 deaths within a year after birth for every 100,000 live births.

According to the Commonwealth Fund report, in 2020, the U.S. had an infant mortality rate of 5.4 infant deaths within a year of every 1,000 live births—the highest infant mortality rate of all countries studied.

U.S. Has Highest Rates of Chronic Illness

Obesity rates in the U.S. were nearly twice as high as the average of the other countries, which may play a role in the high rate of chronic illness among Americans, including diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular disease.

Chronic disease has been increasing in the U.S. for decades and, in 2020, three out of 10 adults – or 30 percent – said they had been diagnosed with two or more types of chronic illness in their lifetime. Chronic illness conditions include cancer, asthma, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, anxiety and depression. Only a quarter of the other countries reported similar rates of chronic poor health.

Authors of the report suggested that the high spending on healthcare in the U.S. is due to elevated costs of health care; the higher cost of doctors and nurses compared to other countries; the high cost of prescription medication; lack of affordable care for all Americans,  and the failure to prevent and manage chronic illness.

Link to article here.

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4 thoughts on “(REPORT) US spends most but has worst health”

  1. RONALD LEON JONES

    DID YOU KNOW THAT FOR SARS-COV-2 DEATHS (AKA, COVID – 19) THE USA RANKS 215 OF 230 COUNTRIES LISTED. THE DEATHS IN THE USA IS 3,283 PER MILLION POPULATION, WITH A WORLD AVERAGE OF JUST 848 PER MILLION POPULATION. WHAT IS WRONG WITH THE MEDICAL CARE IN THE USA THAT WOULD PRODUCE THIS HEALTH CARE DISASTER…???.TRY THE FDA, CDC, NIH, CMS AND THE EVIL ONE THAT CONSPIRE WITH BIGPHARMA TO FIX A FAUX-VIRUS OUTBREAK THAT THEY STARTED.

    1. Early misuse of ventilators was connected with many “covid” death numbers. Then financially incentivizing “covid” was a major strategic error tainting any and all further “covid” statistics.

      .But the worst error was letting Biden get away with screaming “anyone who killed 300,000 Americans does not deserve to be POTUS”. in the Biden-Trump 2020 debates. The the moderators not letting Trump even respond to that egregious Biden lie.

      Election year exploitation of “covid” by Democrats was the worst error. And now we harvest the consequences in the repetition of totally unverifiable “statistics” about this election year flu season.

  2. We both create and treat the worried-well in the US. Poly-pharmacy is the US medical goal. How many drug can we get Americans to take in the name of wellness.

    Before anyone pushes universal health care – single payer – in the US, DEFINE health care. It will be vastly different expectation than found in healthier countries.

  3. One paragraph tells it all – “Obesity rates in the U.S. were nearly twice as high as the average of the other countries, which may play a role in the high rate of chronic illness among Americans, including diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular disease.” Ya think!

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