I was looking at OECD health care data for something else Ive been working on and wanted to share some of it. Its well known that the United States spends a lot more per person on health care than comparable countries and that our actual health outcomes are anywhere from average to bad. See, for example, this chart from a 2008 paper by Gerard Anderson and Bianca Frogner. That chart shows how each countrys spending and life expectancy differ from what you would expect based solely on how rich they are (per capita GDP). As you can see, we spend a lot more and live a lot less. (That paper also considers a number of other outcome measures; we do well on some, poorly on others.)
Besides where we are today, though, the other thing we should be interested in is where we are going. Our health care system is the product of a number of historical factors that we cant make go away with a snap of our fingers. So even if we have a bad, expensive health care system, maybe it is getting relatively better and relatively less expensive.
Nope.
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