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Many Experts Say Health-Care System Inefficient, Wasteful

Many Experts Say Health-Care System Inefficient, Wasteful

Talk to the chief executives of America’s preeminent health-care institutions, and you might be surprised by what you hear: When it comes to medical care, the United States isn’t getting its money’s worth. Not even close.

“We’re not getting what we pay for,” says Denis Cortese, president and chief executive of the Mayo Clinic. “It’s just that simple.”

“Our health-care system is fraught with waste,” says Gary Kaplan, chairman of Seattle’s cutting-edge Virginia Mason Medical Center. As much as half of the $2.3 trillion spent today does nothing to improve health, he says.

Not only is American health care inefficient and wasteful, says Kaiser Permanente chief executive George Halvorson, much of it is dangerous.
…
The United States today devotes 16 percent of its gross domestic product to medical care, more per capita than any other nation in the world. Yet numerous measures indicate the country lags in overall health: It ranks 29th in infant mortality, 48th in life expectancy and 19th out of 19 industrialized nations in preventable deaths.

One way to reconfigure health spending is to shift large sums into prevention and wellness, said Reed Tuckson, a physician and executive vice president at UnitedHealth Group in Minneapolis. The idea is to tackle the handful of preventable, chronic illnesses such as heart disease and diabetes that account for 75 percent of health-care costs.
…
the Dartmouth team concluded that as much as 30 percent of medical spending — or $700 billion — does nothing to improve care.

I continue to write about this serious problem for the USA. The credit crisis is an immediate crisis (with roots in many bad decisions over the last decade). But the health care crisis is just as deadly. The health care crisis is like a person smoking. It might not kill the economy immediately, but the huge harm down to the economy by the broken healthcare system is like a cancer on the economy.

Previous posts on problems and suggestions for improvement: PBS Documentary on Improving Hospitals – site and books on improving the health care system – International Health Care System Performance – USA Health Care Improvement – Broken Health Care System: Self-Employed Insurance – Excessive Health Care Costs – USA Spent $2.1 Trillion on Health Care in 2006

December 8th, 2008 John Hunter | 4 Comments | Tags: Economics, quote

Comments

4 Comments so far

  1. Curious Cat Management Blog » USA Spent $2.2 Trillion or $7,421 Per Person on Health Care in 2007 on March 16, 2009 8:55 am

    The costs for health services and supplies for 2007 were distributed among businesses (25%), households (31%), other private sponsors (4%), and governments (40%)…

  2. Health Insurers Propose Pricing and Coverage Without Respect to Health at Curious Cat Investing and Economics Blog on March 28, 2009 1:48 pm

    […] improvement. However, it is far from the solution. Many problems are not solved by that at all. The huge amount of waste generated by insures and all the forms, needless bureaucracy… they generate is hard to […]

  3. Deficit Threat from Health Care Costs at Curious Cat Economics Blog on May 20, 2009 11:58 am

    Medicare is set to become a drain on federal finances by 2017. If health-care costs continue to grow at the same rate, the cost of Medicare and Medicaid will be 20% of GDP by 2050…

  4. Curious Cat Management Improvement Blog » Hospital Providing Better Health Care While Reducing Costs on January 19, 2010 8:32 am

    […] failure. For decades the enormous cost of supporting special interest groups that benefit from the current broken system have forced the rest of society to pay for their unwillingness to improve. We can no longer afford […]

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