These statistics come from 1991 but show a trend that needs looking at when we are fed the line about the best healthcare system in the world.
http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/L-healthcare.htm
Health Care Expenditures (percent of GDP) (1)
United States 13.4%
Canada 10.0
Finland 9.1
Sweden 8.6
Germany 8.4
Netherlands 8.4
Norway 7.6
Japan 6.8
United Kingdom 6.6
Denmark 6.5
Doctors' incomes: (2)
United States $132,300
Germany 91,244
Denmark 50,585
Finland 42,943
Norway 35,356
Sweden 25,768
Percent of population covered by public health care:
ALL NATIONS (except below) 100%
France, Austria 99
Switzerland, Spain, Belgium 98
Germany 92
Netherlands 77
United States 40
Average paid maternity leave (as of 1991; this changed with Clinton's
signing of the 1993 Family and Medical Leave Act):
Sweden 32 weeks
France 28
United Kingdom 18
Norway 18
Denmark 18
Japan 14
Germany 14
Netherlands 12
United States 0
Life Expectancy (years):
Men Women
Japan 76.2 82.5
France 72.9 81.3
Switzerland 74.1 81.3
Netherlands 73.7 80.5
Sweden 74.2 80.4
Canada 73.4 80.3
Norway 73.1 79.7
Germany 72.6 79.2
Finland 70.7 78.8
United States 71.6 78.6
United Kingdom 72.7 78.2
Denmark 72.2 77.9
Infant Mortality Rate (per 1,000 live births):
United States 10.4
United Kingdom 9.4
Germany 8.5
Denmark 8.1
Canada 7.9
Norway 7.9
Netherlands 7.8
Switzerland 6.8
Finland 5.9
Sweden 5.9
Japan 5.0
Death rate of 1-to-4 year olds (per community of 200,000 per year):
United States 101.5
Japan 92.2
Norway 90.2
Denmark 85.1
France 84.9
United Kingdom 82.2
Canada 82.1
Netherlands 80.3
Germany 77.6
Switzerland 72.5
Sweden 64.7
Finland 53.3
Death rate of 15-to-24 year olds (per community of 200,000 per year):
United States 203
Switzerland 175
Canada 161
France 156
Finland 154
Norway 128
Germany 122
Denmark 120
United Kingdom 114
Sweden 109
Japan 96
Netherlands 90
Note: the murder rate for the above age group is 48.8 per 200,000. Even
subtracting this entirely still puts the U.S. near the top of the list.
Premature Death (years of life lost before the age of 64 per 100 people):
United States 5.8 years
Denmark 4.9
Finland 4.8
Canada 4.5
Germany 4.5
United Kingdom 4.4
Norway 4.3
Switzerland 4.1
Netherlands 4.0
Sweden 3.8
Japan 3.3
Percent of people with normal body mass:
Men Women
Germany 53% 37
Finland 51 37
United Kingdom 46 38
Canada 52 29
Switzerland 49 30
France 44 30
Denmark 44 25
United States 47 22
Sweden 44 25
Percent of people who believe their health care system needs fundamental change:
United States 60%
Sweden 58
United Kingdom 52
Japan 47
Netherlands 46
France 42
Canada 38
I'm mystified most by how right-wing politicians paid off by the pharma companies tell the U.S. public how people with universal health care hate it and envy the U.S. If you criticise the NHS in the UK you might as well announce you kill puppies and assault senior citizens and the Queen on a regular basis. People will hate and despise you.
I don't know I don't live there...but I have seen many people and documentaries on the health care systems around the world, and they are not perfect, people wait a long time and suffer, and there are many that come to the US for treatments...
It is interesting that there are soooo many different views on the situation...humans...we are a varied people...
Oh my God, well that is so true. The thing is there is no perfect system and never will be. But given the choice, I could and would never move to the US or anywhere with a similar system, and healthcare is the #1 reason.
I know I will never worry that if I get sick it will result in bankruptcy, or not go to the emergency room (we call it casualty) or my doctor because I can't afford it. That's worth gold. (It's certainly worth taxes, especially when you consider the stats suggest uni health care actually costs less per person than the alternative.)
I agree. It`s worth taxes, just like a lot of basic services (police, roadworks, food safety, general safety standards, fire services, postal services, schools). In Canada too, do away with health care and people would start burning down politicians` houses.
However, having lived in the UK as well, in both countries there is still lots of criticism and dissatisfaction, that I have heard. But that does not mean either Canadians or Brits don`t want public health. I mean, people criticize the schools too (in Britain, less so in Canada) -- that does not mean they want them done away with!
... so you are both right, in a way
I agree. I saw a great documentary on PBS last month -- they looked at five(?) systems, some in Asia, some in Europe (Japan, Taiwan, Britain, France, Germany, Switzerland, I think). They were all extremely different from each other -- I had no idea.
It turns out that a lot of countries that have guaranteed standards, ie., government oversight, still run entirely private systems. In other words, the Canadian and British all-public models are not the norm at all. The difference between German or Japanese systems and the US system was that the companies cannot do whatever the hell they want -- because the government regulates the industry, keeping costs down, for example.
This is analogous to the Canadian financial sector, which is also completely private, but is strictly monitored by the govt. The result was the Canadian banks were not allowed to get involved in high-risk ventures over the past decade, so none of them fell....
As is so often the case, this is another vote for a robust, free-market capitalism that still has some govt oversight built in so that corporations do not drive the entire bus over a cliff.
Yes, there needs to be health care reform. There are many problems, but simply inflating the numb er of people who are crammed into an already overburdened and inefficient system does not really do anything but increase the cost. What is being run through congress is public health care EXPANSION not reform....it does nothing to deal with the underlying issues of fraud, waste, duplication of efforts etc.
Yes, and the last three nouns you use in your last sentence sum up the whole issue -- exactly; right on.
Hehe...thank you! Glad I got something right!
thanks for the stats...how old are they?
I think the main issue is with the economics and the greed of insurance companies and medical corporations, as well as government control
if those stats are very recent, its obviously not because we have bad healthcare or the people are dieing right and left (no political pun intended )
the death rate of 1-4 year olds in the US is troublesome...did your sources define that?
Here are some sites you can investigate for yourself. We are really overdue for improvement.
http://www.photius.com/rankings/healthranks.html
http://www.allcountries.org/ranks/preve … _2008.html
http://www.photius.com/rankings/total_h … _2005.html
http://www.photius.com/rankings/world_h … ranks.html
http://www.photius.com/rankings/
Check out #ilovethenhs on twitter. It will tell you plenty about universal health care.
I don't twitter...suggest a website for me of information ?
I agree.
We need target specific reform.
We do NOT need an entire over-haul and nationalization of our health care system. As those idiots in congress and the white house are trying to do right now.
Yes this sounds basically right -- usually large overhauls result in lots of mess, because they require a massive orientation of millions of people working in that system, and of the various sub-systems that make that system up.
So, yes, targeted specific reform -- sounds like a motto for living, in fact! Good way to phrase the issue
back to Constitutional living is the answer, then nobody is in anybody else's pocket to get what they want, and free market capitalism can thrive ethically.
the problem now is that it is such a Gordian Knot...governments are corrupt and corporations have no ethical care for people that "turn their wheels"
ramming through what congress has just done is not the answer
Like the Gordian Knot, the solution requires cutting through all the bureaucratic layers that have worked like molasses to slow down services and increase costs...We do need health care reform, not a new, gigantic government bureaucracy that enriches unions, politicians, and insurance companies...Force congress to have the same health care package they are forcing upon the public and see how fast we get real reform...
So here is a possible answer to gradually getting back to Consitutional Law
check out www.givemeliberty.org they have just completed a Continental congress that met in the Chicago area last month. Reprpesentative from every state were there (elected by people that had heard what was going on, I voted )
They decided to do a "redress of Grievances" as per the Constitution, They came up with a list of grievances that will be presented to the government after they get signatures from the people. the website is still in progress but you can find information and link to it through the above web address.
these people are very organized and are all professional people that have been concerned for decades that the US was going down hill from lack of staying within Constitutional Law
Hear Hear!!
I don't know what has happened when people think that the best way to make an enormous, nation-changing decision is to ram it through law before people even really know what's going on or have a chance to actually THINK about what they ought to be doing. It's a mess.
Death rate of 1-to-4 year olds (per community of 200,000 per year):
United States 101.5
we need non profit health care insurance company's .i have answeres
a perspective on what is happening with healthcare
http://video.foxnews.com/12792795/deadl … b0c12f2749
America has a lot to be “proud” this Christmas Eve
If the statistics are correct than….
America is either LAST or at the very BOTTOM in following areas
Health care coverage
Life expectancy
Normal body mass
ZERO weeks Maternity leave
In the other hand
America is FIRST on ALL the following areas:
Infant mortality
Children death rate (1-4)
Young adults (15-24)
Premature death
*** Anybody still believe we do not need reforms???!!!!!!
I don't think anybody seriously thinks we don't need reforms. The question remains - which exactly reforms? And this is where people divide. Merry Xmas
I don't think the health care discussion can be simply distilled into a few stats suggesting that a particular system is better or worse than another.
The child mortality figures of the OP suggest that American children die at twice the rate of Finnish children and the implication is due to the health care system.
First these numbers are somewhat different from the data provided by the World Health Organization as summarized below:
Total Child Mortality per 1,000
United States 1.3 (0.13%)
Japan 1.2
Norway 1.2
Denmark 1.2
France 1.0
United Kingdom 0.9
Canada 0.8
Netherlands 1.0
Germany 1.0
Switzerland 0.9
Sweden 0.8
Finland 0.8 (0.08%)
http://www.who.int/whr/2005/annex/annexe2b_en.pdf
But is there even more to these facts? First, let's look at the rate for multiple gestation births--
Multiple gestation births
United States 31.1 per 1000 live births (3.11%)
Finland 15 per 1000 live births (1.5%)
sources: http://www.stakes.fi/EN/tilastot/statis … ummary.htm
http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/ … in-births/
http://www.fertilityforumonline.com/new … .asp?ID=12
Now the mortality rate for twins is 5X higher than for a single baby. From the WHO data we see that the US mortality per 1,000 births is 1.3 while Finland's is 0.8. But an extra 1.6% of the births have a 5X greater risk of death. Is this enough to account for the difference in mortality?
If we assume that for every 1000 multiple gestations in Finland the mortality would be 0.08% * 5 = 0.4%, then adding 16/1000 more births would add 0.4% * 1.6% or a total of 0.64 percent or 0.064 to the total mortality bringing Finland's mortality to 0.864 per 1000.
There are also ethnic differences in infant mortality that should be considered when comparing disparate health care systems. Here is just one example:
http://adc.bmj.com/content/84/3/222.abstract
To come out with a blanket statement about a system based upon a few numbers seems naive to me. I think the situation is much more complex.
What about the GDP figure?
Half of the US expenditures are consumed by just 5% of the population.
http://www.ahrq.gov/research/ria19/expendria.htm
If we could start looking into and controlling these costs, the GDP figures could decline. Administrative overhead in Canada is much less than the US which accounts for another $1000 per capita that could be reduced.
The average medical insurance company has a profit margin of about 4% and a return on equity of about 10-12%. Of course, we all know that every middle man in a transaction gets a cut.
There are certainly areas that can be altered to improve the system. Of course, I do think everyone should have some basic level of coverage and that it is a travesty a nation as rich as ours can't provide that to our citizens like we do with public education through high school.
But, I also think that some level of personal responsibility is needed. Rates of obesity in the US are double that of Canada--
http://www.obesityrates.net/obesity-rat … y-country/
which automatically leads to higher health care costs and lower life expectancy. I think the quality of the medical care is as good as other countries. I think the population leaves much to be desired.
We need health care reform to cover those without coverage, but we also need lifestyle reform to lower costs.
I think we do need healthcare reform, but, banking on insurance companies to play nice with new health insurance laws will be the same mess we are currently in with credit card companies.
The rules of this new reform will not be fully functional for a few years down the road, allowing insurance companies to do whatever they want in until that deadline. Which will probably mean higher premiums, and more people losing their insurance because they can no longer afford it.
I don't know all the laws, because the public has not seen what is in it. Only a bunch of bickering. However, I hope that there is a low cap on what these companies can charge for their service. Without a cap, they will charge whatever they want, and without the public option, there will be no compitition.
One of the reasons we have become slaves to big Oil, because there is no real competition. And, once the smaller insurance companies go under, the big boys will raise their rates so
high nobody can afford it.
Making it manditory, with fines, is a bunch of bullshit. The only thing that will do is put more money into insurance companies, while the care doesn't change. The same as for mandatory auto insurance.
I pay $125.00 a month, and have had only 1 minor accident in 17 years. That is one hell of a lot of money to one insurance company, add the thousands of other clients. They are making Billions.
Don't let political groups fool you, when they tell
you these businesses are losing money. It's all a big smoke screen to get more of your tax dollars. That's why they are fighting this bill. They want to keep getting it.
Health care reform may be a good idea, but having politicians control it will be disastrous!
I don't know all the arguments, politics & issues involved surrounding this Health care reform stuff. All I know is this hard, cold, true fact: I DON'T WANT THE GOVERNMENT controlling my health care decisions or treatment my doctor & I decide on.
So, you'd rather have insurance companies deciding on it?
From all I've heard, I doubt the government will tell you what sort of health care you need.
A peculiar thing has transpired with the Democratic party winning the government is that it seems to be the party of Yes and the Republicans have become the party of No.
The Republicans are going to have to sell the same people a better message if they wish to win over the change they are predicting in 2010 and 2012.
The people they have to win over are going to want to hear more than no from a bunch of politicians who have constantly proven they can't be trusted and start showing some initiative as to how we can come to some compromises.
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