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To: AtlasStalled
I have no idea who this author is, so one can read the information and glean whatever data is worthwhile. Other Freepers quote various "Examiner" articles here, so I've seen this publication show up numerous times, but I think that all sorts of views can be printed in this publication, so take it as you will...



Why change? The US has the 37th best health care system in the world

July 2, 2009 - 12:17 PM
Extreme Weight Loss Examiner
by Mark Rubi

Yes, it is true that the US has the 37th best health care system in the world, according to data from the World Health Organization (WHO). Fortunately for the ego of the United States, the WHO stopped doing the ranking in 2000 due to the difficulty of compiling the data.

The top ten are France, Italy, San Marino, Andorra, Malta, SIngapore, Spain, Oman, Austria, and Japan.

11-20 are Norway, Portugal, Monaco, Greece, Iceland, Luxembourg, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Ireland, and Switzerland.

21-30 are Belgium, Columbia, Sweden, Cyprus, Germany, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Israel, Morocco, and Canada.

31-40 are Finland, Australia, Chile, Denmark, Dominica, Costa Rica, United States of America, Slovenia, Cuba and Brunei.

41-50 are New Zealand, Bahrain, Croatia, Qatar, Kuwait, Barbados, Thailand, Czech Repubic, Malaysia, and Poland

Although our health care system is the ranked behind nearly every other industrialized country, the US can proudly boast that we pay more, a LOT more, than anyone else for our care. Not only does the United States spend more than $1 trillion more per year than anyone else on the planet, we also pay more, a lot more, per capita for our health care.

The World Health Organization says, “The U. S. health system spends a higher portion of its gross domestic product than any other country but ranks 37 out of 191 countries according to its performance.” This puts to rest the tired notion that the American “free market” pushes for the most efficient and least expensive system. In fact, we are the least efficient healthcare in the industrialized world.

The graphs from the Kaiser Family Foundation represents expenditures from the latest worldwide data, from 2003, when we were spending a mere $5,711 dollars a year per person for our health care. That number is now nearly $8,000 a year. Our health care costs, as a percentage of our Gross Domestic Product, have gone from 7% in 1970 to 15.2% in 2003. President Obama, in numerous speeches, points out that at current growth rates the cost of our health care will be 20% of our GDP by 2015.


Only one other country, Switzerland, pays as much as 11% of their GDP for their health care. Two out of three pay less than 10%. Most of the advanced nations in the world see health care as a right, and to quote the well known credit card commercial, “priceless.” In the United States, however, health care is NOT a right, and it does have a price, and a very high price indeed.


For all the money we spend, it would be nice if the health of Americans reflected that expenditure. But are we the healthiest country in the world? No, but we are the fattest. More than 30% of the adult population in the US is now considered medically obese. That 30% more than doubles the rate of most European countries, and triples the rates in France and Denmark.

The health care industry is going to spend billions of dollars to defeat health care reform. Thousands of “Health Scare” stories will be published in our newspapers and magazines. Millionaire lobbyists in high priced suits will be paying lots of visits to your elected officials. Advertisements will be all over the television, radio, and the internet. All of the effort will be made to convince the American public and their elected representatives that reforming health care would be too costly. And it would be too costly… to the health care industry.

The reason the folks in the health care industry are going to spend billions to defeat health care reform is because it works. Time and time again, the best interests of 300 million Americans have been pushed aside for the welfare of the very few. One of the leaders of the fight against reform is Rick Scott. He founded a group called "Conservatives for Patient's Rights," whose motto is "Tell Congress to listen, too."

It's interesting that Scott is promoting patient's rights since he was forced out as head of the Columbia/HCA health care company after the company was found guilty of fraudulent billing of state and federal health plans. Columbia/HCA was fined a record $1.7 billion for their infraction.

That’s because the health care industry believes that they have a “right” to your money. And they believe that they have the “right” to deny you health care if it gets too expensive. The insurance companies don’t want to compete with the government but are adamant that they be “free” to deny coverage to whomever they choose. Medical care, especially in our overpriced system, can be a serious hindrance to profits. That's why they like to dump high cost patients onto the government and US citizens who pay with their taxes.

Americans have long held the attitude that, as Americans, we have “rights.” These “rights” set us apart from much of the world. However, much of the world has caught up and even passed us by recognizing that health care is a basic human right, and not a commodity. If that doesn’t make you think, try this: Failure to fix the health care system will bankrupt this country.

For more info: Find out the facts about US health care costs. Don't let the commercials and articles extoling the wonders of our care fool you. The health care industry has been ripping off the country for a long time. Tell your elected officials that we want to get what we pay for. Tell your congressmen and senators that you want the same health care rights as the rest of the industrialized world.

© Mark Rubi, July 2, 2009

19 posted on 02/23/2010 10:12:35 AM PST by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: Star Traveler

Hmmm... was that the same World Health Organization (WHO) that provided that “expert opinion” on the H1N1 flu pandemic that was going to kill about a bazillion people in just a short period of time?


21 posted on 02/23/2010 10:43:08 AM PST by Col Freeper (FR is a smorgasbord of Conservative thoughts and ideas - dig in and enjoy it to its fullest!)
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To: Star Traveler

With the US rated at 37 and Cuba at 39, inquiring minds would like to know just how the data was compiled, and what weighting various factors were given in determining the ranking, and what sort of data manipulation has been done.

A point is often made about how expensive health care is in America. Any one know what part of that expense is because Americans have quicker access to health care, and don’t die while waiting for expensive procedures?

How is the cost of providing care for illegal aliens factored into the US data? Does the inclusion of that expense artificially inflate the dollars per person reported?

The report notes that the American people are overweight. This does raise the cost of medical care, but that is not as much an indictment of the system of medicine, as it is of lifestyle.

It is an indictment of the inactivity, and typical diet of the American Consumer. (Most people do not go to the doctor and say help me I gained 5 lbs this year).

After 15 years, they look in the mirror, and wonder what happened. The doctor may have been telling such a person that they needed to loose weight, but it is ultimately up to the individual to do it.

Even the morbidly obese can loose weight by eating healthy and exercising, as the Biggest Loser has shown. The existence of overweight Americans does not prove that our system of medicine is poor.


39 posted on 02/23/2010 2:06:48 PM PST by greeneyes (Moderation in defense of your country is NO virtue. Let Freedom Ring.)
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To: Star Traveler

France, Italy, San Marino, Andorra, Malta, SIngapore, Spain, Oman, Austria, and Japan.

Yeah, doncha just love all the state of the art technologies, procedures, research and Rx that comes out of Malta, Singapore, Andorra et al?

Wow, sure wish the USA had such smarts /s


41 posted on 02/23/2010 2:43:44 PM PST by A_Former_Democrat
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