On Health Care
The United States has the largest, most expensive, and yet least efficient health care system among the developed nations on Planet Earth.
We spend more on health care and get less for our money than anyone else, yet when anyone talks about changing the system people scream, "Socialized Medicine!" They point to England and the long waits people have for care, or to the number of Canadians coming to the States to get operations. They don't talk about France or Germany, where waiting periods are no longer than ours, drugs cost less, and quality of care is equal.
A woman from England told me once, "My country cares what happens to me." We can't say that on this side of the pond.
They also scream that parmaceutical companies won't have the incentive to develop new drugs if they aren't allowed to gouge people like my 87-year-old mother who can't afford all her prescriptions. Yet under the present system they spend far more on advertising than they do on research, and the new drugs the come up with mostly duplicate drugs already on the market. I heard this morning (on the BBC of all places) that there are six major high blood pressure drugs on the market and six cholesterol-lowering drugs. Even Nexium, the most highly-advertised (at least in my perception) drug on the market is just a re-working of Prilosec, whose patent is about to expire.
I don't have a simple, bumper-sticker-sized answer to this problem, but I do believe it would help if we looked carefully at countries where the health care system works better than ours does for some ideas.
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