In a new international ranking, the United Kingdom
ranks first, while the U.S. performs poorly across almost all health metrics.
JUN 16 2014, 10:54 AM ET FiDA Highlight
The United States healthcare system is the most
expensive in the world, but when it comes to health outcomes, it performs worse
than 11 other similar industrialized nations, according to a new report released today by the
Commonwealth Fund.
The nonprofit examined the health systems
of Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand,
Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, and it found that the U.S. was last or near-last
in measures of health access, efficiency, and equity.
Commonwealth Fund
According to the report, the United Kingdom,
which has a single-payer healthcare system, ranks first. In second place is
Switzerland, which like the U.S. has a compulsory health insurance
system—though Swiss health insurers are not allowed
to make a profit off their basic insurance plans.
It's
important to note that one reason for America's lag, as the authors explain, is
our historic absence of universal health coverage. But
the data for the report was collected before the full implementation of
Obamacare, which dramatically expanded health insurance, so it's possible that
the U.S. may rise in future rankings.
And notably, both the U.K. and U.S. ranked low on
the "Healthy lives" scale, which considers infant mortality, healthy
life expectancy at age 60, and mortality from preventable conditions, such
as high blood pressure.
The U.S.
spends 17.7 percent of GDP on healthcare, much more than all of the other
countries, while Australia spends the least—8.9 percent:
Commonwealth Fund
The metric the U.S. performed best on was
"effective care." Particularly laudable were our preventative care
efforts, which included things like physicians asking patients to eat healthy
and exercise, and doctors' offices sending patients appointment reminders.
The U.S. fared poorly, meanwhile, when it came to
managing administrative
hassles for both doctors and patients, avoiding emergency room use, and
reducing duplicative medical testing, all part of the score for "efficient
care."
"It is apparent that many primary care physicians struggle to
receive relevant clinical information from specialists and hospitals,
complicating efforts to provide seamless, coordinated care," the report
authors note.
Americans also had the worst equity of care
between high-income and low-income patients.
"The U.S. health care system is not the
'fairest of them all,'" the authors write, "At least from the
viewpoint of those who use it to stay healthy, get better, or manage their
chronic illnesses, or who are vulnerable because of low income and poor
health."
The bitterness of that is likely to be around for
a while, too.
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