Although the U.S. health care system is among the best in the world, Americans suffer from what experts have called “the U.S. health disadvantage,” an amalgam of influences that erode well-being... These include a fragmented, profit-driven health care system; poor diet and a lack of physical activity; and pervasive risk factors such as smoking, widespread access to guns, poverty and pollution. The problems are compounded for marginalized groups by racism and segregation... The result is a high disease burden among Americans, and shorter life expectancy compared with that in comparable high-income nations over the last two decades, NYT
- Our lowered longevity rate is due to our mostly privatized healthcare system.
- Medicare recipients who take advantage of it are probably the best cared for population and a reason for rising life expectancy in the over 65 - the drop is connected to the younger population.. especially due to drugs. Regular visits to a doctor are crucial and not everyone makes it a habit.
- A medicare for all system with control of drug prices would reverse things and lead to a rise in overall health and life expectancy. In areas with sparse medical coverage, privatized Medicare Advantage plans are often the only option - and some report decent care - if you don't get real sick.
- In the current political climate only a state by state approach will bring us a universal system. The blue states are the most likely. California was close to passing a bill and so has NYS - but the unions are an obstacle. They shouldn't be.
- The UFT and other unions should stop opposing the NY Health Act which would bring such a system to our state. Our union claims to support the concept but says only in a national system, which the chances of happening are nil.
- Medicare for all costs too much both parties say but billions for Ukraine, useless visits to the moon and defense -- no one says a peep except those on the left.
I've had reason to use the medical system a lot over the past dozen years. Achilles, Broken wrist, a few bad infections, a few short bouts in the hospital, a turp on the prostate -- I know, too much information -- but I feel confident in the system. Which was why so many of us reacted so strongly emotionally at the threat of Mulgrewcare -- even if he was right -- he ignored the threat we felt.
And by the way, we are still under threat of being forced into a MedAdv plan as Adams and Mulgrew partner up.
Here's the NYT article:
U.S. Life Expectancy Falls Again in ‘Historic’ Setback
The decline during the pandemic is the sharpest in nearly 100 years, hitting Native American and Alaska Native communities particularly hard.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/31/health/life-expectancy-covid-pandemic.html
While other high-income countries were also hard hit in 2020, the first year of the pandemic, most had begun to recover by last year, he said.“None of them experienced a continuing fall in life expectancy like the U.S. did, and a good number of them saw life expectancy start inching back to normal,” Dr. Woolf said.Those countries had more successful vaccination campaigns and populations that were more willing to take behavioral measures to prevent infections, such as wearing masks, he said, adding: “The U.S. is clearly an outlier.”It was the largest reduction in life expectancy in the United States over the course of a two-year period since the early 1920s, when life expectancy fell to 57.2 in 1923. That drop-off may have been related to high unemployment and suicide rates during an earlier recession, as well as a steep increase in mortality among nonwhite men and women.Although the U.S. health care system is among the best in the world, Americans suffer from what experts have called “the U.S. health disadvantage,” an amalgam of influences that erode well-being, Dr. Woolf said.These include a fragmented, profit-driven health care system; poor diet and a lack of physical activity; and pervasive risk factors such as smoking, widespread access to guns, poverty and pollution. The problems are compounded for marginalized groups by racism and segregation, he added.The result is a high disease burden among Americans, and shorter life expectancy compared with that in comparable high-income nations over the last two decades, Dr. Woolf said.
I am all for universal health insurance in the US, but it makes no sense to attribute a decline in our life expectancy to a situation that has not changed. It is quite clear that the overwhelming reason for the decline has been the COVID pandemic, and the inept handling of it by the Trump administration and red state governments like Florida.
ReplyDeleteActually the covid outcomes are also due to the lack of a better health plan - compare to other countries -- we had a worse death rate - so people with covid didn't get the care they would have if we had a rational system. And the decline began way before covid -- like 2014-5.
DeleteGreat article and I’m in complete agreement except for your statement concerning complaints about billions going to Ukraine coming from the left - that’s overwhelmingly coming from the right. The Ukraine is a minefield of competing interests. And it would be interesting to do a delve into why we support them. Cheers, Jim
ReplyDeleteUS life expectancy fell from 2013 - 2018 (78.94, 78.91, 78.89, 78.86, 78.84, 78.81) with a small uptick in 2019 to 78.87.
ReplyDeleteThese are really troubling numbers for a wealthy country. If you saw the numbers, and not the country name, you would guess some sort of war or natural disaster. But not huge - it averages to a decline of -0.01 years/year.
In 2020 it fell to 77.0, and in 2021 it fell further to 76.1. These are huge drops.
So we have a huge event (COVID) driving down numbers that were already declining/flat - and when they should be rising.
Lack of good health care for everyone, could that be the backdrop? Yes. Also horrible nutrition.
But don't forget gross inequality. Racism and segregation create separate Americas. And class difference breaks us apart further.
Medicare for All will help, without a doubt.
But the issues go further than just MfA.
Very telling video on the healthcare system. https://youtu.be/BYCAu6kSNKs
ReplyDelete