Currently the United States pays more per patient and as a percentage of GDP than any other nation on Earth. So, does that mean that we are receiving the best care? Do we have the highest life expectancy, the lowest infant mortality rate, the best treatment for the most people?
No. According to the OECD, we do not have any of those. In fact, we run about middle of the pack. Even in terms of medicine research, three of the five top drug manufacturers are European companies.
So, what do we have?
We have the best medical care in the world, for a few people who can afford it.
I received my employer's charitable donations booklet today, which is provided by the United Way. One of the many health-related charities to which employees may donate is a group called FACES. They provide information and assistance to families of children who need to undergo reconstruction surgery after being born with birth defects and skull deformities.
It is likely a wonderful organisation. They have an entire section of their website based on How to Pay the Bills?
The first sentence reads: "Dealing with the cost of medical treatment for your child can be overwhelming."
They go on to provide example letters so you can complain to your insurance company if they deny your claim to pay for your child's facial reconstruction. They also provide links to charities that help defray medical costs as well as a few programs.
http://www.faces-cranio.org/For people who talk about the evils of "socialised medicine", I wonder, what about leaving a child with a cleft palate or skull deformity? Or forcing a couple into bankruptcy so that they can get their child's deformity corrected?
John Edwards, a Democratic candidate for President, spoke of a 50 year-old man in West Virginia who could not speak because of such a deformity that has never been corrected. It was a cleft palate that could have been fixed with a childhood surgery, but had never been. Imagine the opportunities this man missed in his fifty years because his family was too poor to have anything done about it.
It doesn't matter if you like Edwards or not (that wasn't an endorsement of him, just a point he raised). This is no way for a civilized nation to run a healthcare system. Call it socialised medicine, universal healthcare, or whatever - but it works far better than the leviathon we've created.