Despite Americans paying nearly double that of other nations, the US fares poorly in list of 10 countries

The United States health system ranked dead last in an international comparison of 10 peer nations, according to a new report by the Commonwealth Fund.

In spite of Americans paying nearly double that of other countries, the system performed poorly on health equity, access to care and outcomes.

“I see the human toll of these shortcomings on a daily basis,” said Dr Joseph Betancourt, the president of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation with a focus on healthcare research and policy.

The fund said the US would need to expand insurance coverage and make “meaningful” improvements on the amount of healthcare expenses patients pay themselves; minimize the complexity and variation in insurance plans to improve administrative efficiency; build a viable primary care and public health system; and invest in social wellbeing, rather than thrust problems of social inequity onto the health system.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Shocking. “Best health care system in the world,” my ass. “You’ll have to wait months if there’s universal healthcare.” removed, I have to wait months now.

    • Thebeardedsinglemalt@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      “You’ll have to wait months if there’s universal healthcare.”

      Yeah, but that healthcare is still practically guaranteed, and it won’t put you into debt

      • PlasticExistence@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Several times I’ve had to wait for months on healthcare in the US system. This is such a weak argument against a socialized system.

        • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Literally anything I want done is a wait list here. Eye exam; schedule a time. Dentist; is it an emergency? We’ll schedule you sometime next month. Phycologist; its a theee month wait list. Primary care; see you in three months. Finding a reliable primary care has been a dead end nightmare.

          I’m not shitting on doctors or nurses. Just this whole system is bonkers. For what reason? Healthcare is not a business.

          “In capitalism everything’s a buisness.” Well get fucked.

          I’m not saying we should be reductive. There is reasons for the way we do things. I am saying though, we’ve gone too far and it’s obscuring the goal of a having a functional society.

          People need professionals to help with their health; an extremely complex field. Every person needs this. Its not an optional thing. You want a society, well a society needs people, and people need Healthcare.

          “Well I never wanted to be part of a society.” Did you enjoy the luxury that having a society provides? From plumbing to super yatchs, all of this wealth we share was made by people like you and me.

    • Paddzr@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Who has ever said that? You guys have no healthcare. It’s literally a joke to anyone outside of US.

    • thesohoriots@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      My insurance bumped up the copay on primary care to make it less affordable than an urgent care visit, incentivizing us to get care with immense surcharges. But at least we can get a same-day appointment instead of waiting a month or two to see the most qualified and familiar person with our conditions. Fuck capitalism, as usual.

    • apfelwoiSchoppen@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I had my primary care doctor retire. The gigantic hospital system with which they work put all existing patients in as new patients for the incoming doctor. It has been 18 months and I’m still waiting for the new patient visit. Fighting to even get maintainance medications filled has been crazy because I keep being told “I have to see my doctor.” Circular logic abounds.

      The gigantic system makes it so I cannot directly contact the office, it is all hurry up and wait through their patient portal systems which require 24-48 hours for response time. Can’t go to the doctors office to complain without an appointment.

      This system is working optimally for someone. It is not us.

  • N0body@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    But the US system ranks first in wealth extraction from people to billionaires, so it’s working as intended.

  • Bassman1805@lemmy.world
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    My wife broke her ankle and insurance denied the entire claim for being “not medically necessary”. The “medical professional” (not doctor) who denied the claim had experience in OBGYN, not orthopedics.

    100% going to win the appeal because like, we have x-rays of the shattered bones in her leg, but seriously wtf. People seriously believe this is the ideal medical system?

      • Maeve@kbin.earth
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        When I was in the insurance industry, for a company who administered various policies from Aetna, BCBS, Cigna, United and Medicare, that was the SOP. Deny anything that took more than a few seconds of brain power, put clients through endless rounds of appeals. The medical director was amoral AF too, because well, the insurance company exists for profit, and bonuses are dependent on paying out as little as possible. It got pretty bad, too, enough that my immediate supervisor started signing off a bunch of approvals, circumventing the medical director, where any shred of plausibility was available.

        Now, there is automated software. HIPAA has it’s pros and cons.

    • Ms. ArmoredThirteen@lemmy.ml
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      I’m on appeal #3 right now with my insurance for something they told me would be 100% covered. I’m getting my doctor in on it to do a peer to peer. He sounded so fed up with everything he was like “it’s probably some retired pediatrician who doesn’t know anything about what you need” when talking about who he’d need to talk with. If this one doesn’t work then I’m on to the “threaten to sue” stage which I’m not excited about. The whole thing is a mess and the process and money that’s gone into it would have easily bankrupted or put me homeless at most previous times in my life

      • Bassman1805@lemmy.world
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        I’m not a lawyer, but a piece of legal advice I’ve seen repeated many times is “Never threaten to sue. Just sue.”

        As soon as you threaten to sue, you’ll never be able to talk to anybody except the legal team, and they’ll do nothing to help your case.

      • Hasherm0n@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        I’m sorry you’re having to deal with this. This is an issue that’s deeply personal to me.

        When my wife was pregnant with our daughter, she was severely preeclamptic going into the third trimester. She ended up having to stay in the hospital for five weeks with her blood pressure being constantly monitored and nurses ready to pump her full of medications anytime it went too high. It was so severe that when she was being discharged a doctor told us that there was a good chance she would have died had she been admitted to another hospital less equipped to deal with it.

        Our insurance tried to stick us with a bill that was hundreds of thousands of dollars, saying that the whole thing “medically unnecessary.” Thankfully we had an amazing patient advocate that handled all of that for us and I heard from her later that my wife’s OBGYN (who is an amazing, kind hearted, and soft spoken man) had called up the insurance and absolutely ripped them a new one.

        Private insurance is a parasite on society. The goals of a private medical insurance company are at odds with providing good care to people and they leach resources better spent elsewhere.

        For those wondering, wife and baby thankfully ended up happy and healthy in the end.

        Sorry for the rant, this kind of shit gets me absolutely inflamed.

  • sevan@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    It’s helpful to know that if I ever leave the US, I’ll have better healthcare. I don’t even need to spend any time researching that aspect.

  • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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    My family and I moved from the US to Canada in the summer of 2023 and last week was the first time I had to make use my Services Card. I went to the ER in excruciating pain, had blood and urine labs done, a shot of pain killers then waited around (a long time) for a CT scan. The doctor said it might be a new record, but I had been bumped a few times by suspected stroke patients that came in, so totally understandable. Several hours later with a prescription slip in hand I exited the hospital. Easy as pie.

    For anyone who has never had the displeasure of experiencing an American hospital you can not understand how much simpler and less stressful and cheap the Canadian system is. I dont know what it would have cost me in the USA, probably whatever my insurance deductible was, but it certainly was not $0. That state of not knowing what all this is going to cost you, and how you will afford it, makes an already awful experience even worse. Not being harassed for money on the way out, never once discussing the cost of something with the DR was truly eye opening. Source

  • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    Some people achieve some sadistic satisfaction from denying poor people health care, even if it cost extra to themselves!?
    In USA there is a sentiment that looks like they are trying to exterminate the poor, by letting them suffer and die, instead of trying to build a better more humane society for all.

    • PriorityMotif@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      There’s a lot of miserable fucks out there due to a mix of leaded gas fumes, childhood trauma, and religious/political brainwashing.

    • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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      To me, its much more that the rich don’t want to pay for the healthcare of the people who earn all of their money for them, rather than active sadism.

      More, devoid of empathy and not really seeing them as fellow humans, deserving of basic rights like not dying of poverty. Especially if it costs them money.

  • Resand@lemmy.world
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    No no no, that’s simply wrong.

    US healthcare system is the best in the world, at doing what it’s designed to do. Issue here is that they’re measuring it on care provide vs cost, while the US system is optimized for profits.

    If they instead ranked the results by which system generated the most private profits the US would be first.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      The line I’ve heard is

      best in the world for those who can afford it

      But medicine is still an industry that benefits from economy of scale. It still benefits from public sector R&D. It still benefits from robust safety regulations and enforcement of best practices.

      We’ve been chipping away at all of that. Hell, we’re straight up closing hospitals and clinics all over the country, purely because so few of them are economically viable when pitted against a ruthless private insurance market.

      If they instead ranked the results by which system generated the most private profits

      There are sectors that bring in big profits, but they’re extracting those profits from the sectors that deliver the medicine.

      The snake is eating it’s own tail. This isn’t a long term strategy for profit. Every quarterly cycle leans harder on Medicaid and Medicare as the private systems fail.

    • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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      The UK did it immediately after WW2 when our economy was destroyed. We were in much debt, we didn’t finish paying America back until 2006. However, apparently, the country we paid all that money to cant afford it?

      You have to admire the brazennes of the lie though.

      • DancingBear@midwest.social
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        When we find the military and give weapons to countries like Israel and many others across the world, it raises the stock prices of military contractors and congress gets more personal wealth.

        A public option for healthcare would lower stock prices for health care companies and insurance companies which congress is also heavily invested in.

  • jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    The U.S. health care system is a failure because of the continued existence of health insurance companies over the more streamlined approach of Medicare for All.

    Also this graph is hilarious, albeit depressing.

    • Hapankaali@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Actually, many of those countries don’t have systems similar to Medicare for All. Netherlands, supposedly second in this list, has a mostly privatized system with mandatory insurance, so does Switzerland. France and Germany have semi-public and private health insurance companies. The US has bigger (and different) problems than merely the existence of health insurance companies.

  • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Turns out a profit motive is not the best system for everything in the world. Who would have guessed?