The Bishop and the Butterfly: Murder, Politics, and the End of the Jazz Age
    cmaukonen's picture

    Bad Medicine

    Well this is interesting but not to surprising. According to this article from AFP, it seems that health care is the reason our longevity in this country is now well below the rest of the developed world.

    Life expectancy is shorter in the United States compared with other wealthy nations because of its health care system -- and not obesity, smoking, homicide or vehicle accidents, according to a study out Thursday.

    In 1950, the United States ranked fifth for female life expectancy at birth, with only Australia, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden doing better, according to the study by Peter Muennig and Sherry Glied of Columbia University, published in the journal Health Affairs.

    But by 1990, the United States fell to 46th in the world for women's longevity, and by 2010 it ranked 49th for male and female life expectancy combined.

    Americans are not dying younger -- the United States has achieved gains in 15-year survival rates between 1975 and 2005. However other countries have seen greater gains, the study said.

    The researchers compared 15-year survival at age 45 and older, risk factors and per capita health care spending in the United States with Australia, Austria, Belgium, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland.

    All the comparison countries have universal health coverage, albeit with very different systems.

    Smoking and obesity, the two most important behavior-related risk factors for health in the United States, were ruled out as culprits in the US drop in the rankings.

    "The prevalence of obesity has grown more slowly in the United States than in other nations while smoking prevalence has declined more rapidly in the United States than in most of the comparison countries," the study says.

    The number of deaths from homicide and traffic accidents remained stable over time, meaning those two causes of death were ruled also out.

    So the researchers turned their attention to per capita health care spending.

    Muennig and Glied found that per capita health spending in the United States increased at nearly twice the rate in other wealthy nations between 1970 and 2002.

    The United States now spends well over twice the median expenditure of industrialized nations on health care, and far more than any other country as a percentage of its gross domestic product, the study found.

    So it's how we impliment our health care and who gets it that determines live expectancy. Imagine that.



    Comments


    Thanks for the reference and the post. There was a fascinating documentary, I think it was PBS, on a study in Louisville, Ky, comparing the longevity of persons to their economic status in the city. No news--low income, low longevity, and I assume, low access to health care.  The opposite for the more wealthy. Self esteem obviously in play. It's my arm chair research that people first give up in their minds, and then the body follows suit, so to speak.  


    well frankly...

    I mean it is so horrible to live here anyway, why on earth would anyone wish for extra years to disenjoy it?