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God's Politics

Why the U.S. Ranks 37 Among World Health Systems, Plus Four Alternative Models

by Valerie Elverton Dixon 09-09-2009

The United States is the richest nation on earth.  It has some of the best-trained physicians and best medical facilities on earth.  It is a leader in medical innovation and medical education.  However, when the World Health Organization studied the health-care systems of some 191 countries, the U.S. ranked 37.  Under the leadership of Dr. Christopher Murray of Harvard University and Julio Frenk, former health minister in Mexico, the WHO analyzed financing, organization operations, and availability of care in different systems.  Its 2000 report, which was intended to help countries improve their health care systems, found the United States far behind its industrialized peers.

This information comes from T.R. Reid, a Washington Post correspondent and bestselling author, in his recent book The Healing of America. In this book Reid compares and contrasts the American health-care system with those of other nations.  He presented some of his findings in a documentary for the PBS series Frontline.

What Reid found can go a long way toward informing our thinking about the urgent need for health-care reform in the United States.  There is a measure called Disability-Adjusted Life Expectancy (DALE) that measures “healthy life expectancy.”  This comes about through a healthy lifestyle and the access to medical care for both the prevention and cure of illness.  The U.S. ranks 24 according to the DALE measure (70 years).  This is lower than Israel and ahead of Cyprus.  According to Reid the U.S. received this ranking because it fails to provide access to basic health care for some 45 million people.

In his book, he describes four basic models of care:

1. In the Bismarck system, private insurers and private providers with employers and employees pay the premiums.  In most countries that use it, everyone is covered and insurance companies are highly regulated and are prevented from making a profit on basic health care.  Government pays for those who are unemployed.  This corresponds to the kind of insurance most working people in the U.S. have.

2. In the Beveridge system, government owns the health-care facilities, most providers are government employees, and the government pays all the bills.  This corresponds to the Veterans Administration system in the United States.

3. In the National Health Insurance model, the medical facilities and providers are private, but the government pays for the services.  This corresponds to Medicare in the U.S.

4. Then there is the out-of-pocket system.  Those who have money get health care and those who do not have money do not get health care.  This is the case for the 45 million uninsured in the U.S.

So, in our public discourse, when we worry about “socialized” medicine coming to the U.S. and dealing a death blow to our freedoms, let  us remember that we already have “socialized” medicine for military personnel, veterans, Native Americans, everyone over 65, and the poor.  Part of the problem with our system is that it is not a unified system, and there is no equality built into it.  And to think that the emergency room answers the problem is also deeply mistaken.

Reid tells us that the industrialized nations who made a decision to provide universal health care to their citizens first made a moral decision.  They decided that basic health care ought not to be a for-profit enterprise, and they based their moral decision on a value that defined them as a people.   For France and Switzerland the value was solidarity.  What moral value does the health-care system in the United States demonstrate?

Dr. Valerie Elverton Dixon is an independent scholar who publishes lectures and essays at JustPeaceTheory.com. She received her Ph.D. in religion and society from Temple University and taught Christian ethics at United Theological Seminary and Andover Newton Theological School.

To learn more about health-care reform, click here to visit Sojourners’ Health-Care Resources Web page.

Categories: Books, Health, Human Rights
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  • Ashleigh101
    No, I've been using my God-given ability to reason, discern, and think.
  • Ashleigh101
    So, Republicans lost the last election... and that means?? The President should just write them all off and ignore their opinions and views? Refuse to work with them?

    And BTW, as of today, 56% oppose Obamacare. Those are not all people who voted for Obama. His ratings are plummeting, faster, in fact, than any other U.S. President at this point and time in their Presidency.

    Many who voted for Obama no longer support him. I can think of a few. A black police official and friend of the officer accused of being racist by Obama. She said to a reporter: "I voted for Obama. I will not vote for him again." And then there's this man where I live in CA who voted for him but now does not support or like him due to what Democrats are doing to the water for farmers in CA and Obama's apathy and nonaction on it.

    There are others. But my point is... just because Republicans "lost" doesn't mean you just write them off. There are MILLIONS who did not vote for Obama. And there are many who now no longer support Obama. And to write them off and dismiss and/or ignore them is simply foolhardy.
  • justintime
    Do you think Bush was accessible and bipartisan?
  • justintime
    Do you think Bush was accessible and bipartisan?
  • justintime
    If the Republicans have health care plans, show us the plans and defend
    them right here on God's Politics.
    I don't think you can.
    And stop whining.
    Republicans lost the last election.
  • justintime
    You've been watching too much Fox Noise.
  • Ashleigh101
    Yah, it's all because we're afraid of change. Has nothing to do with our obesity epidemic. Or our huge numbers of immigrants. Or our huge rates of poverty. Or our massively huge and diverse population. No, we're just "afraid."

    You've been watching too much CNN.
  • Ashleigh101
    The Republicans do have plans. Obama won't listen. He's arrogant. It's his way only. He hasn't even met with the Republicans since April.

    Name one single thing that Obama has been bipartisan on. Appointing his czars? Nope. Appointing any of his other staff? Nope. Acknowledging the concerns of citizens at Townhalls. Nope. Dismissing them? Yes. Chastising them? Yes. Scolding them. Yes.

    I agree with Mike. You seem like you have been maniuplated by the media and by Obama. You regurgitate the things you've heard from them.
  • Ashleigh101
    ARE YOU KIDDING?! Obama does not make himself any more "accessible" than he makes himself "transparent."

    His "townhalls" are full of supporters... hand picked by his administration. They are totally staged.

    He definitely loves the media and loves to speak to us on our t.v.s and in magazines, etc... but that certainly does not make him "accessible."

    All we do is we see him and we hear him. But he does not see or hear us. He only sees and hears what he wants to, and when it comes to critics, he simply dismisses them.
  • Ashleigh101
    The doctor shortage is not at all "selfish." Let's say you are a father of four children. You have a wife and elderly parents. You've got many other relatives and friends. Is it "selfish" to be concerned that they will get good and timely health care???

    And how is it selfish to care about one's own health? Heck.. if I'm dying or dead, how I am going to help all these poor people needing health care?

    If there is a doctor shortage, which I believe even the liberal newsmedia at MSNBC reported on just the other day, it will be a very real problem that will not only affect you, but also your family and loved ones.

    Why is it "selfish" to be concerned about your loved ones???

    In Canada, there are HUGE wait times for patients. I watched a video of a Canadian woman who explained how her mother had an infected leg. It was a full year by the time she finally could see a doctor. By then, the other leg was infected. So what'd they do? Amputate both legs. Yes, the woman now has no legs. Why? Because it took a gawsh darn year before she could get treatment!!

    Now, how would you feel if that was your mom? Do you honestly feel more concerned for a stranger than your own family??? We ought to be concerned for others, those we don't know, but we also ought to be concerned for our families.

    You are very naive to believe that the government won't be running health care under this plan. For those people who have this plan, their health care decisions WILL be made by the government, just as my health care decisions might be made by a private insurer.

    You need to do some more research on this plan. It sounds as if you don't quite understand a lot of the realities of it and are very naive about it.

    Why don't you start here with this article at Boston.com about Massachusette's doctor shortage (in which patients are being DENIED care because there simply aren't enough doctors to see them all). http://www.boston.com/news/health/blog/2009/09/...

    Massachusette's, by the way, implemented a universal health care plan a few years ago. The results have not been great.
  • jdquest
    The doctor shortage excuse for not passing healthcare reform is a very selfish one. If there is going to be a doctor shortage under healthcare reform then there is a doctor shortage already. There will not be a sudden influx of people into the country. The only difference will be that more people will be able to afford the "luxury" of seeing a doctor when they need one. Maybe some people won't be able to get in to see the doctor for their hangnail but a person with health problems will be able to see a doctor when they get the flu and reduce their chances of dying from complications.

    People are continuing to treat this heathcare reform plan as if the government will be running healthcare. The plan was for government to provide a public option for INSURANCE for people who could not get it elsewhere. Obviously, there would be some determination of what would be paid just as insurance companies determine that now.
  • MarKatJac
    I have lived in Panama, which has a 2 tiered system. My family has experienced both tiers. The poor can go to the public hospitals, which are by anyone's metric 'spartan.' You paid $2, and if you were really poor, you spoke to a social worker, to see if you could be seen for free. Since my husband made $1.75/hr, you know we went there. No private rooms, my children were housed in wards. The family was expected to be around to feed and change the children. While I was there, I was weaning my son, and was able to donate my breastmilk to the prenatal ward. The actual healthcare, at this public hospital was excellent. My children were seen for their asthma and life-threatening reaction to penicillin, I would say the experience rivaled any care they would have gotten in the US.
    My mother-in-law had private insurance through her employer. She got to go to a hospital with more posh accomodations, but I wouldn't say she got better medical care. She came to visit us in the US, and her insurance covered her care here, too.
    I don't understand why a public option must be feared. I have seen it in action, and if a developing country like Panama can pull it off, why can't we?
  • Ashleigh101
    LOL! What does it matter. Whether I do or not, my points are still valid... reasonable, logical, and well-informed. But, no, I do not work for any insurance company. Not now, not ever. And I have no relatives or loved ones who do either. It amazes me how it's so hard for you and a couple of others here to believe that Christians, like myself, can actually be against this health bill and can have concerns about it.
  • "Made himself more accessible"? How do you mean? And it doesn't matter whether Bush the Lesser was, this President has claimed to be different and a change.
  • justintime
    Obama has made himself more accessible to public comments than any
    president in my lifetime.
    Contrast Obama's accessibility to that of Bush the Lesser.
    I don't think you have a shred of an argument, xfree.
  • Read my statement again. There are forums to complain, but none that the president has to directly confront his less-vindictive critics. The President has a sanitized experience because he can get on national TV and claim untrue things about those who oppose him. He is immune from standing before the facts brought against him and countering them.
  • justintime
    It didn't take much thinking to realize that Bush's GOP is a crime
    syndicate masquerading as a government.
  • justintime
    No forum?
    What were the Town Hall meetings all about?

    Thanks for giving permission for the Dems to ignore the GOP.
    That's the only way for health care reform to happen.
  • justintime
    No forum?
    What were the Town Hall meetings all about?

    Thanks for giving permission for the Dems to ignore the GOP.
    That's the only way for health care reform to happen.
  • justintime
    Just about every libertarian posting on the God's Politics blog has this
    opinion about America's health care system.

    Do you guys ever listen to yourselves?
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