I wonder if this controls for various other lifestyle choices.
I find it ironic that the government spends so much money subsidizing high fructose corn syrup, and then spends even more treating the health problems that result from it. If we didn't have an agricultural system that makes unhealthy food cheap and healthy food expensive, perhaps we wouldn't have quite so many obesity-related illnesses.
Same thing with parking lots and interstates being subsidized while dense urban development (walkable/bikeable neighborhoods) is not. Cars kill a lot of people outright through accidents, and then indirectly through people becoming couch potatoes.
Usually by the time people come under care of the health care, the battle's already been lost. Acute, lifesaving interventions on otherwise healthy people aren't all that expensive. Chronic conditions caused by 40 years of neglect are. I'm curious if we'd get both the cheaper health care and the longer life expectancy of European countries if our cities were laid out like theirs and our agricultural system didn't dump massive amounts of subsidies on the corn industry.
This is a terrible graph. It took me five minutes to figure out how everything is related. Data such as this is much more naturally plotted as an x-y scatter-plot. Thickness of the datapoints could indicate number of doctor visits. Instead, the graph eliminates the x-axis, but retains the space. Very strange choice.
Actually, this seems like a terrible visualization because it's taken out of context, and was originally presented in a magazine. You can see where the article text would go, the United States label is hidden away near the binding and far in the upper margin, and due to expected info location/"eye drift" one doesn't find the U.S. at first.
Wish I could provide a scan of the page as it went to print, but I only saw it while visiting family. Regardless, the presentation is clearly to cause that double take rather than just to efficiently convey the information.
Graphs are meant to present data clearly and concisely. The most clear and concise presentation method should be used. If it is not, there are reasons to be skeptical.
This graph is not the best presentation imaginable; it's not even mediocre. It is meant to appeal visually to those who already have reached the conclusions it is meant to illicit; it is graph porn.
Health care spending and quality is very complex. What about adjusting for relative wealth (not merely the health care spending share of GDP), lifestyles, racial composition (if I am correct, there are biological differences in addition to the obvious socio-economic ones), preferences (how much would you spend for an extra month), etc. Asking questions like why other countries spend less on drugs (does the U.S. subsidize medical research by spending more or is it merely the one that allows rent seeking or both?)
After doing so, I believe you will still find evidence suggesting that the U.S. system spends more than it should and there can be clearly identified inefficiencies. That is the distilled information that is interesting -- not the merely manipulative.
The research question is one that occurred to me. Do these cost data include spending on medical and pharmaceutical research? I would imagine that the bulk of that spending occurs in those same countries that are "above" the average line in this graph, and could contribute to that skewing.
Data for missing countries (from a comment written by the author of the original graph):
HEALTH CARE SPENDING (per person in U.S. dollars)
Norway: $4,763
Netherlands: 3,837
Belgium: 3,595
Germany: 3,588
Ireland: 3,424
Iceland: 3,319
-------------(OECD average: $2,986)
Greece: 2,727
Italy: 2,686
Turkey: 618
LIFE EXPECTANCY
Italy: 81.2
Iceland: 81.2
Norway: 80.6
Netherlands: 80.2
Germany: 79.8
Ireland: 79.7
Belgium: 79.5
Greece: 79.5
-------------(OECD average: 79.2)
Turkey: 72.1
DOCTOR VISITS A YEAR
Belgium: 7.6
Germany: 7.5
Iceland: 6.5
Netherlands: 5.7
Turkey: 5.6
Italy: no data
Norway: no data
Ireland: no data
Greece: no data
It's a shame the graph misses data form countries like Italy or German, both countries provides free universal health care.
of the three countries that have highest (and surprisingly parallel) slope: japan, south kore, mexico ... it suggests that #visit correlates with LE ... and health coverage is unimportant
but there are countries that have less #visit but more expensive (it suggests patients go to doctor not only for consultation) ... so #visit is an unreliable predictor so is cost
to me it seems the most predictive is location (yes, the country names are data points too) ... if i want to live long, i'll settle in japan and do what the average japanese for their healthy lifestyle
You could probably get 90% of the benefit of the Japanese lifestyle by moving to a walkable urban environment like NYC, selling the car, and eating the japanese diet. You'd probably have to visit there first to see what that actually is. Any other East Asian diet would be fine as well - hell, a pre-1970s American diet would probably be fine.
I am curious if those life expectancy figures have been controlled for smoking, though. If not - wow.
1. Health insurance, but not treatment, is fully tax deductible. So if you buy your own penicillin, it's with after tax money, but if your insurance company buys it, it's pre-tax money. That's one of the reasons that health insurance is so widespred in America even for routine medicine like antibiotics and checkups. That's a major contributing factor in why the administrative costs are so high.
2. There's a shortage of doctors in America, and qualified doctors from other countries are not allowed to practice medicine in the United States. So there's good doctors from Canada, England, Japan, wherever that'd love to practice in the USA, but can't. This artificially inflates doctor's wages by restricting supply.
3. American doctors are typically required to get an undergraduate degree, medical degree, and do a below market, crazy hours residency in order to be able to practice medicine. That's 8-10 years of study and below market working to practice medicine. Now, medicine is very important and needs to be done right, but I don't believe for a second that a focused apprenceship couldn't teach a very specific kind of medicine - say arithscopic surgery - in just 2-4 years under a highly trained doctor, but this isn't an option.
4. The Food and Drug Administration requires new drugs to be proven not only for safety, but also efficacy. That's an incredibly high and expensive burden to meet - that means that drugs need to be proven to work to a certain standard, instead of just not harm. This adds years of development time and millions of dollars in cost to the new drug development cycle.
Those are all legislated reasons that increase the cost of medical insurance, doctors, and drugs. They'd be fairly easy to remove -
1. All medical and health expenses can be written off taxes regardless of insurance. Employees can choose to convert som of their wages to a medical or health plan tax free to both the employer and employee. (Currently, under most circumstances, only employer-provided health insurance can is tax free)
2. Allow any doctor in a country with reasonably competent medical standards to practice in the United States.
3. Require that doctors be able to demonstrate that they can practice their area of medicine capably. Be flexible in how they demonstrate that. Note: This will incur high opposition from medical schools and current doctors who are currently enjoying the wage premium and had to go through the very long, difficult, and expensive system.
4. Change the drug standard from "safety and efficacy" to only safety. Drugs will come to market much faster and cheaper. There's plenty of people and organizations that will test proven safe drugs for efficacy for free or nominal cost once drugs hit market, and efficacy will get understood with time. Put this way - a proven safe but questionably effective treatment against heart disease being held off the market for five years and costing much more to get to market is not a good thing. If it's certainly safe, then let people make the decisions with their physicians, instead of having the FDA take such a strong gatekeeping stance.
Technology has progressed such that we don't need government protection from ourselves as much any more. The current set of legislation has greatly increased the costs of doctors and medicine. Regardless of political position, and regardless of stance on other health issues, addressing these four points will make the medical system fairer, more effective, and and less expensive with relative ease.
Admittedly, there's some powerful entrenched interests that are winning in the current arrangement, and will oppose these simple improvements.
Regarding point 4, what would prevent a drug company from claiming that, say, Aspirin could cure AIDS? I do not think that is a stretch, either. If companies can profit from selling pills to increase penis length, I see no reason why they wouldn't make other claims if they were legal.
I do not trust in the market to correct unverified claims; many people want to believe in miracle cures, and will buy snake oil despite others decrying it as such.
To the contrary, the United States has an unusually high number of medical doctors per 100,000 persons in the population. Economist Martin Feldstein discovered a long time ago, in comparative studies of the United States and Britain, that doctors refer patients to other doctors, so that increasing the percentage of doctors in a country can actually result in more use of medical treatments per patient without any improvement in patient outcomes. After he made this discovery, the United States figured out that promoting the opening of more and more and more medical schools was not going to result in doctors serving underserved areas such as isolated rural areas. (Doctors like to live in communities similar to where their spouses are accustomed to live, as other studies have found.)
The other suggestions in the parent comment have been carefully considered by policy makers around the world and have been found to be policies with some ill trade-offs as well as good, and not just in the United States.
1. I doubt the effect of this is as strong as you seem to think, but ok.
2. There's a reluctance to allow doctors educated elsewhere to practice without undergoing a rigorous accreditation process of some sort in nearly every country in the world except possibly in some of the most destitute third world countries. This isn't unique to the US.
3. All over the world doctors have to train for at least 8 years or so before they can practice. Again, not unique to the US.
4. There's a reason for that. It means the worst quackery is kept off the market. I'd say that's a good thing (also, it's not unique to the US, although the FDA is indeed a world leader in its stringency). Note, however, that the entire world is using (and paying for!) drugs that have been through the rigorous FDA testing process, so again this is not a reason why medical care in the US is more expensive than in the rest of the world.
I agree with your overall point that the U.S. medical system suffers from overregulation. We could (and should) allow more primary care to be performed by, for instance, qualified nurses, RNs, and nurse-practitioners. As you point out, the existing guilds hate this idea.
But your first point needs some correction. Health insurance is only tax-deductible when it's paid for by your employer. [EDIT: Just noticed you mention this lower down, but your first paragraph gives a misleading impression.]
This is perverse in multiple ways. There's the way you mention: that it subsidizes health care over other forms of compensation, so we wind up spending more on health care than we would otherwise.
But also, with particular relevance to HN, it subsidizes employment over other kinds of work. If you leave your job to start a startup, you lose a substantial tax advantage.
Most of this points (at least 1-3, I don't know about #4) are also true in other countries (like mine). So they are not reasons for why the US health care system is expensive but rather propaganda.
About point 3, teh shortage of doctors is not strictly a US thing. I know in Canada doctors often migrate to the US for a better pay, putting pressure on salaries.
Point 1 is not really different in many other countries.
> 2. Allow any doctor in a country with reasonably competent medical standards to practice in the United States.
Not even that. Canada gets many South African doctors (most of which are fairly competent). In addition to this, they continually monitor doctors. So, if an incompetent doctor slips through, he is quickly caught and his license is revoked.
3. could get fixed much more easily by dropping the 4-year pre-med undergraduate degree (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-medical), and adding about 1 year of instruction to med school.
1. The structure of an unstrained free-market medical system is well-suited for rent-seeking rackets. Doctors and hospitals tend to be monopolies. Even with competition, few are competent at choose between competitors, etc. This situation has historically been restrained by modest regulation and by the fact that most people entering health care are motivated by the desire to help others. These restraints are gone.
2. The current situation is neither "over regulation" nor "under regulation". It is mis-regulation. But all the regulation or lack-of regulation in the world won't really prevent a determined group of racketeers/rent-seekers aiming for their accustomed level of sales and profits through their monopoly position. There just aren't enough honest dollars in health care to incentivize the currrent system into being efficient. Making the existing system "work" is akin buying La Cosa Nostra spreadsheets and hoping this will turn it into an honest business. Reform at this juncture is like saying "can't you only restrain the growth in fraudulent loans just a bit". When the housing bubble was high, even the growth couldn't be stopped. Now, the decay can't be hidden.
3. It's not "The Doctors" or "the insurance companies" or "the hospitals" that are the problem but all of these and none these. There are indeed "good parts" and "bad parts" in the drug, hospital, doctoring and insurance industries. But the "bad parts" are far to too adaptable for efforts at restraining them piecemeal to work. From the chart in the article, you'd have to deduce the parasitic parts of US health care get at least twice the sales of the parts needed for a sane health care system and quite possibly four or five times that.
4. The point is NOT how we will correct the excesses of the current health care system. The question is when the growth of the current excesses will reach the point when they are truly unsustainable. The current "reform" wave seems aimed to enlisting the state primarily in the task of squeezing more money out of those who weren't paying into the racket (the uninsured). Well, once they've run of people to squeeze and health care cost go from 20% to 30% of GDP, there won't be any further place for the cancer to go but down. I'm guessing that's five to ten more years. Will our economy last that long? We'll see.
5. There are free market solutions that could work and single-payer solutions that could work. It's shame we won't see either kind of sanity for a while.
In addition to health insurance being broken, it seems like most doctors are really terrible in the U.S. I read the other day that it takes on average seven years to correctly diagnose a medical condition. Some diseases, like celiacs, have an average time until diagnosis of 10 years. If you haven't already read How Doctors Think, it's truly horrifying. Unless you have something like strept throat, you're generally pretty screwed even if you have great medical insurance. And I'm speaking from personal experience here; about three years ago I started having some medical issues, and I went into the doctor the day the symptoms started happening. A dozen doctors and specialists later and I still don't have a correct diagnosis. The fact that I'm probably going to have to wait another 5+ years until I can get the problem even diagnosed is complete bullshit. Now it could just be that I have something that is really hard to diagnose, but more likely the reason no one can figure it out is that medical schools have done their best to select doctors with zero intellectual curiosity who never voluntarily read anything about medicine other than pharma pamphlets. Just look at what happened to Shooter because the 'best' doctors couldn't even diagnose something as trivial as lyme disease: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=868325
edit: Someone really needs to make a crowdsourced website where you can post all your symptoms and test results, and then offer up a bounty to anyone who can figure out the correct diagnosis.
Someone with even a remote familiarity with the practice of medicine would not refer to Lyme disease, one of the great imitators, as 'trivial'. The rest of your post, though forceful, similarly suffers from having no idea what you are talking about.
Regarding the length of time from the onset of low-risk chronic diseases (unpleasant though they may be), you are right that this is a problem but dead wrong about the cause. The problem is overspecialization and undercoordination. An inherent idiocy in the practitioners would be an easy problem to remedy; the truth is much more pernicious.
I'm sorry to hear of your health problems, but unfortunately doctors don't have tricorders yet. It's quite incorrect to suggest that people with "zero intellectual curiosity" are sought out by medical schools, in fact it's a preposterous claim.
We have made great advances in medicine in the past 100 years, but complete understanding of the human organism and its diseases still lies far in the future. Some diseases have no "tests" or definitive diagnostics; they are identified by ruling out other possible causes of the symptoms. This can take time.
> Someone really needs to make a crowdsourced website where you can post all your symptoms and test results, and then offer up a bounty to anyone who can figure out the correct diagnosis.
Just like that episode of House :) Except in the show most responses were things like "alien abduction" or "this thing my homoeopathic treatment cures". Oh yeah, and there were quite a number of these. How would you solve the swarm of crackpots problem?
I think we should show a chart of each country's health care costs relative to how much their lawyers make on health care related malpractice cases. Because in America, it's out of control, and probably the largest reason health care costs so much.
Honestly, a good first step in taming the health care and health insurance costs should be to cap how much lawyers make on malpractice cases.
Why do people rarely talk about tort reform? I apologize if you did, but I just did a quick browser search for "tort" and "lawyer" and got no results.
Really, why was I down voted? I'm not sure what was wrong with the comment. I think anyone would agree with the idea of tort reform, just like anyone would agree with the idea of health care reform. But even if you don't, I thought that with Hacker news, you only down vote people when they aren't insightful or off-topic. So, a differing opinion also accounts for down voting now? Like on Digg?
Apart from the utter brokenness of the US system, which needs no further proof I guess, this chart says that health care spending isn't very effective at increasing life expectancy. There are other factors, maybe food, that influence life expectancy much more than health care.
I'd imagine that computing the cost of health care is an incredibly complex undertaking. Without being able to review the methodology used, this graph is next to useless. For example, here are just a few questions that come to mind (and I'm sure more would arise if the methodology was properly peer reviewed):
1. Are there no data points between the United States and Switzerland? Are there no data points above the United States and below Mexico? If there are, that would make the graph misleading and they have to specify this limitation if they're intellectually honest. If there aren't, they have to demonstrate that they've gone through the exhaustive list of countries and there are no other "interesting" data points.
2. Is the cost adjusted for cost of living at a given country? If not, that would make the graph extremely misleading. If yes, what adjustment strategy was used? Can we see the ratio between cost of health care and median yearly salary, for example?
3. What does "average life expectancy at birth mean"? Does it account for countries that have a significantly lower birth rate than the United States? I would guess not, which could significantly affect the perception of the numbers. How does one normalize for something like that?
4. How was the currency conversion rate computed? Currency prices fluctuate throughout the year, did they account for that? How much does that affect the numbers? Could be a lot, could be a little, but I need to know whether this was taken into account.
5. What does "universal health coverage" mean? Soviet Union had universal health coverage and no medication, surgery performed by under-qualified residents, and no post-surgery care, unless you know someone or bribe the doctor, of course.
6. Surely there are countries without universal health care other than the U.S. and Mexico - how do they stack up?
7. I'm willing to bet a country like Poland has a lot more homeless people that don't factor into the life expectancy numbers than the U.S. That begs a more general question of whether the same methodology was used for computing the cost or life expectancy for each country. If they simply took official numbers from each country, it's almost certain that they were computed differently. Was this accounted for? If not, I need to know. If yes, how were the numbers normalized?
One could probably come up with dozens of questions like these. Of course any analysis of a problem that complex can be called into question, that doesn't mean every analysis is useless. But before we can seriously discuss this graph, or base any policy decisions on it, they at least have to provide the methodology. It doesn't look like this graph is intellectually honest to me, and the burden of proof is on the author.
A response to the graphic suggests that while "this was evidence of an insane and inefficient healthcare system", "if [they] really wanted a chart that captures what’s wrong with America’s healthcare system, [they] should have gone to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ national health expenditures data website and downloaded the figures showing how rampant third-party payment has resulted in consumers directly paying for less than 12 percent of healthcare costs. And when people are purchasing something with (what is perceived to be) other people’s money, it’s understandable that they don’t pay much attention to cost." (http://biggovernment.com/2009/12/29/the-real-healthcare-char...)
I'm sympathetic to this argument given that the American healthcare system is considerably different than many healthcare systems globally in that private insurers acting on behalf of employers (not the users of healthcare) pick up a significant portion of the pie (even if, on a per capita basis, Medicare spending is more than most countries like Canada - though this fact alone begs the question of why the US government wouldn't first seek to fix Medicare).
As a Canadian, the one thing I don't quite understand is how many of my countrymen are so quick to condemn the American system despite all the obvious signs that the Canadian system is unsustainable and failing (http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive...). Further, you read about Animal farm like anecdotes (to be fair, I've seen first hand some of this in Canada as well), and you wonder whether or not healthcare systems abroad can really be distinctly categorized between those that are "universal" and "non-universal" given how radically different implementation is - an example from Japan here: http://biglizards.net/blog/archives/2010/01/my_family_the_v....
There are at least 2 other big problems with this graph if presumably it's being used to argue for changes in policy:
(1) The measurement of life expectancy "at birth". The US spends a considerable amount of money aggressively attempting to treat what would otherwise be considered stillborns.
(2) The lifestyles of Americans that may have nothing at all to do with healthcare implementation (http://www.usnews.com/health/family-health/articles/2008/04/...) - ie this could very well mean that if the US miraculously grew an entirely public and universal healthcare system as modeled against XYZ country, US life expectancy might not necessarily get any cheaper or better - it is entirely possible that it would become more expensive and worse.
The problem with the Health Care debate is that it's become so polarized that advocates of Single Payer won't admit its failures in other countries while those opposed to Single Payer won't admit we have a problem.
Graphs like this are designed to create a visceral response but rationally they mean very little if not accompanied by an item by item breakdown of why the numbers are what they are.
For example, the Canadian system puts price limits on patented medicines while the U.S. system does not. That has nothing to do with being a Single Payer system but is definitely a factor that contributes to higher costs in the U.S.
Ah, spurious comparisons and anonymous blog posts - is there nothing you can't obscure?
The US spends considerable amount of money aggressively attempting to treat what would otherwise be considered stillborns.
I regret to inform you that this particular meme is without foundation. I have had extensive discussions with UK and Euro obstetricians about it and the story that there is some massively divergent standard of care or different administrative classification for births involving medical complications is complete BS, from the same people who go about asserting that family planning is a single step away from forced abortions. The measurement of statistics for things like live births and so forth rely on standardized UN definitions, same as US statistics.
As a Canadian, the one thing I don't quite understand is how many of my countrymen are so quick to condemn the American system despite all the obvious signs that the Canadian system is unsustainable and failing
Canadians' responses to the US are not a rational phenomenon. They're rooted in our identity issues and aren't amenable to argument. This is a (the?) fundamental fact of (English) Canadian history right from the beginning.
It doesn't follow that all our responses are wrong; as far as I can tell they tend to fall along a spectrum. But it's a real weakness that we can't be more objective. It leads us to accept and defend substandard things about ourselves that we could otherwise set about improving... your example being exhibit #1.
Also after a visit to a psychiatrist I found out they charge your insurance more, if you have it, than they would if you didn't. I'm not exactly sure what that was about, but if it was for sympathy, then it just shows that having a bureaucratic insurance company, private or government owned, would still have this problem of distancing the money from the patient.
However I'm still a large proponent of not only life as a right, but healthcare too.
That's an awesome and persuasive infographic. In fact, it's main fault is that it's trying too hard to be persuasive. Putting the US above the legend detracts from the power of the raw data and strikes me as being unnecessarily editorial.
False. The data in this "infographic" is really best represented as a scatter plot, using much less ink, as shown in [1] and similar other blog posts. The lines are unnecessary and misleading.
It's good that Tufte has made concepts like data-to-ink density popular. But I urge you to actually evaluate that value when you look at a graph and refrain from using it to merely signal your knowledge of the right buzzwords.
[+] [-] nostrademons|16 years ago|reply
I find it ironic that the government spends so much money subsidizing high fructose corn syrup, and then spends even more treating the health problems that result from it. If we didn't have an agricultural system that makes unhealthy food cheap and healthy food expensive, perhaps we wouldn't have quite so many obesity-related illnesses.
Same thing with parking lots and interstates being subsidized while dense urban development (walkable/bikeable neighborhoods) is not. Cars kill a lot of people outright through accidents, and then indirectly through people becoming couch potatoes.
Usually by the time people come under care of the health care, the battle's already been lost. Acute, lifesaving interventions on otherwise healthy people aren't all that expensive. Chronic conditions caused by 40 years of neglect are. I'm curious if we'd get both the cheaper health care and the longer life expectancy of European countries if our cities were laid out like theirs and our agricultural system didn't dump massive amounts of subsidies on the corn industry.
[+] [-] terrellm|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] scott_s|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bengebre|16 years ago|reply
http://www.stat.columbia.edu/~cook/movabletype/archives/2009...
[+] [-] gabrielroth|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Pahalial|16 years ago|reply
Wish I could provide a scan of the page as it went to print, but I only saw it while visiting family. Regardless, the presentation is clearly to cause that double take rather than just to efficiently convey the information.
[+] [-] hs|16 years ago|reply
age/cost (the slope)
also, how do you identify your datapoints in scatter-plot neatly?
to me this graph gives surprisingly rich information packed
[+] [-] chasingsparks|16 years ago|reply
Graphs are meant to present data clearly and concisely. The most clear and concise presentation method should be used. If it is not, there are reasons to be skeptical.
This graph is not the best presentation imaginable; it's not even mediocre. It is meant to appeal visually to those who already have reached the conclusions it is meant to illicit; it is graph porn.
Health care spending and quality is very complex. What about adjusting for relative wealth (not merely the health care spending share of GDP), lifestyles, racial composition (if I am correct, there are biological differences in addition to the obvious socio-economic ones), preferences (how much would you spend for an extra month), etc. Asking questions like why other countries spend less on drugs (does the U.S. subsidize medical research by spending more or is it merely the one that allows rent seeking or both?)
After doing so, I believe you will still find evidence suggesting that the U.S. system spends more than it should and there can be clearly identified inefficiencies. That is the distilled information that is interesting -- not the merely manipulative.
[+] [-] ams6110|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] antirez|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hs|16 years ago|reply
but there are countries that have less #visit but more expensive (it suggests patients go to doctor not only for consultation) ... so #visit is an unreliable predictor so is cost
to me it seems the most predictive is location (yes, the country names are data points too) ... if i want to live long, i'll settle in japan and do what the average japanese for their healthy lifestyle
[+] [-] scott_s|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sailormoon|16 years ago|reply
I am curious if those life expectancy figures have been controlled for smoking, though. If not - wow.
[+] [-] codexon|16 years ago|reply
The blog is copying Clusterflock which copied kottke which credited biancolo who presumably saw it directly from National Geographic.
http://blogs.ngm.com/blog_central/2009/12/the-cost-of-care.h...
[+] [-] lionhearted|16 years ago|reply
1. Health insurance, but not treatment, is fully tax deductible. So if you buy your own penicillin, it's with after tax money, but if your insurance company buys it, it's pre-tax money. That's one of the reasons that health insurance is so widespred in America even for routine medicine like antibiotics and checkups. That's a major contributing factor in why the administrative costs are so high.
2. There's a shortage of doctors in America, and qualified doctors from other countries are not allowed to practice medicine in the United States. So there's good doctors from Canada, England, Japan, wherever that'd love to practice in the USA, but can't. This artificially inflates doctor's wages by restricting supply.
3. American doctors are typically required to get an undergraduate degree, medical degree, and do a below market, crazy hours residency in order to be able to practice medicine. That's 8-10 years of study and below market working to practice medicine. Now, medicine is very important and needs to be done right, but I don't believe for a second that a focused apprenceship couldn't teach a very specific kind of medicine - say arithscopic surgery - in just 2-4 years under a highly trained doctor, but this isn't an option.
4. The Food and Drug Administration requires new drugs to be proven not only for safety, but also efficacy. That's an incredibly high and expensive burden to meet - that means that drugs need to be proven to work to a certain standard, instead of just not harm. This adds years of development time and millions of dollars in cost to the new drug development cycle.
Those are all legislated reasons that increase the cost of medical insurance, doctors, and drugs. They'd be fairly easy to remove -
1. All medical and health expenses can be written off taxes regardless of insurance. Employees can choose to convert som of their wages to a medical or health plan tax free to both the employer and employee. (Currently, under most circumstances, only employer-provided health insurance can is tax free)
2. Allow any doctor in a country with reasonably competent medical standards to practice in the United States.
3. Require that doctors be able to demonstrate that they can practice their area of medicine capably. Be flexible in how they demonstrate that. Note: This will incur high opposition from medical schools and current doctors who are currently enjoying the wage premium and had to go through the very long, difficult, and expensive system.
4. Change the drug standard from "safety and efficacy" to only safety. Drugs will come to market much faster and cheaper. There's plenty of people and organizations that will test proven safe drugs for efficacy for free or nominal cost once drugs hit market, and efficacy will get understood with time. Put this way - a proven safe but questionably effective treatment against heart disease being held off the market for five years and costing much more to get to market is not a good thing. If it's certainly safe, then let people make the decisions with their physicians, instead of having the FDA take such a strong gatekeeping stance.
Technology has progressed such that we don't need government protection from ourselves as much any more. The current set of legislation has greatly increased the costs of doctors and medicine. Regardless of political position, and regardless of stance on other health issues, addressing these four points will make the medical system fairer, more effective, and and less expensive with relative ease.
Admittedly, there's some powerful entrenched interests that are winning in the current arrangement, and will oppose these simple improvements.
[+] [-] scott_s|16 years ago|reply
I do not trust in the market to correct unverified claims; many people want to believe in miracle cures, and will buy snake oil despite others decrying it as such.
[+] [-] tokenadult|16 years ago|reply
To the contrary, the United States has an unusually high number of medical doctors per 100,000 persons in the population. Economist Martin Feldstein discovered a long time ago, in comparative studies of the United States and Britain, that doctors refer patients to other doctors, so that increasing the percentage of doctors in a country can actually result in more use of medical treatments per patient without any improvement in patient outcomes. After he made this discovery, the United States figured out that promoting the opening of more and more and more medical schools was not going to result in doctors serving underserved areas such as isolated rural areas. (Doctors like to live in communities similar to where their spouses are accustomed to live, as other studies have found.)
The other suggestions in the parent comment have been carefully considered by policy makers around the world and have been found to be policies with some ill trade-offs as well as good, and not just in the United States.
[+] [-] mtts|16 years ago|reply
2. There's a reluctance to allow doctors educated elsewhere to practice without undergoing a rigorous accreditation process of some sort in nearly every country in the world except possibly in some of the most destitute third world countries. This isn't unique to the US.
3. All over the world doctors have to train for at least 8 years or so before they can practice. Again, not unique to the US.
4. There's a reason for that. It means the worst quackery is kept off the market. I'd say that's a good thing (also, it's not unique to the US, although the FDA is indeed a world leader in its stringency). Note, however, that the entire world is using (and paying for!) drugs that have been through the rigorous FDA testing process, so again this is not a reason why medical care in the US is more expensive than in the rest of the world.
[+] [-] gabrielroth|16 years ago|reply
But your first point needs some correction. Health insurance is only tax-deductible when it's paid for by your employer. [EDIT: Just noticed you mention this lower down, but your first paragraph gives a misleading impression.]
This is perverse in multiple ways. There's the way you mention: that it subsidizes health care over other forms of compensation, so we wind up spending more on health care than we would otherwise.
But also, with particular relevance to HN, it subsidizes employment over other kinds of work. If you leave your job to start a startup, you lose a substantial tax advantage.
[+] [-] xtho|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] igrekel|16 years ago|reply
Point 1 is not really different in many other countries.
[+] [-] w00pla|16 years ago|reply
Not even that. Canada gets many South African doctors (most of which are fairly competent). In addition to this, they continually monitor doctors. So, if an incompetent doctor slips through, he is quickly caught and his license is revoked.
[+] [-] zhyder|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] shawndrost|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] joe_the_user|16 years ago|reply
2. The current situation is neither "over regulation" nor "under regulation". It is mis-regulation. But all the regulation or lack-of regulation in the world won't really prevent a determined group of racketeers/rent-seekers aiming for their accustomed level of sales and profits through their monopoly position. There just aren't enough honest dollars in health care to incentivize the currrent system into being efficient. Making the existing system "work" is akin buying La Cosa Nostra spreadsheets and hoping this will turn it into an honest business. Reform at this juncture is like saying "can't you only restrain the growth in fraudulent loans just a bit". When the housing bubble was high, even the growth couldn't be stopped. Now, the decay can't be hidden.
3. It's not "The Doctors" or "the insurance companies" or "the hospitals" that are the problem but all of these and none these. There are indeed "good parts" and "bad parts" in the drug, hospital, doctoring and insurance industries. But the "bad parts" are far to too adaptable for efforts at restraining them piecemeal to work. From the chart in the article, you'd have to deduce the parasitic parts of US health care get at least twice the sales of the parts needed for a sane health care system and quite possibly four or five times that.
4. The point is NOT how we will correct the excesses of the current health care system. The question is when the growth of the current excesses will reach the point when they are truly unsustainable. The current "reform" wave seems aimed to enlisting the state primarily in the task of squeezing more money out of those who weren't paying into the racket (the uninsured). Well, once they've run of people to squeeze and health care cost go from 20% to 30% of GDP, there won't be any further place for the cancer to go but down. I'm guessing that's five to ten more years. Will our economy last that long? We'll see.
5. There are free market solutions that could work and single-payer solutions that could work. It's shame we won't see either kind of sanity for a while.
[+] [-] Alex3917|16 years ago|reply
edit: Someone really needs to make a crowdsourced website where you can post all your symptoms and test results, and then offer up a bounty to anyone who can figure out the correct diagnosis.
[+] [-] carbocation|16 years ago|reply
Regarding the length of time from the onset of low-risk chronic diseases (unpleasant though they may be), you are right that this is a problem but dead wrong about the cause. The problem is overspecialization and undercoordination. An inherent idiocy in the practitioners would be an easy problem to remedy; the truth is much more pernicious.
[+] [-] ams6110|16 years ago|reply
We have made great advances in medicine in the past 100 years, but complete understanding of the human organism and its diseases still lies far in the future. Some diseases have no "tests" or definitive diagnostics; they are identified by ruling out other possible causes of the symptoms. This can take time.
[+] [-] nzmsv|16 years ago|reply
Just like that episode of House :) Except in the show most responses were things like "alien abduction" or "this thing my homoeopathic treatment cures". Oh yeah, and there were quite a number of these. How would you solve the swarm of crackpots problem?
[+] [-] shughes|16 years ago|reply
Honestly, a good first step in taming the health care and health insurance costs should be to cap how much lawyers make on malpractice cases.
Why do people rarely talk about tort reform? I apologize if you did, but I just did a quick browser search for "tort" and "lawyer" and got no results.
[+] [-] shughes|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] fauigerzigerk|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] coffeemug|16 years ago|reply
1. Are there no data points between the United States and Switzerland? Are there no data points above the United States and below Mexico? If there are, that would make the graph misleading and they have to specify this limitation if they're intellectually honest. If there aren't, they have to demonstrate that they've gone through the exhaustive list of countries and there are no other "interesting" data points.
2. Is the cost adjusted for cost of living at a given country? If not, that would make the graph extremely misleading. If yes, what adjustment strategy was used? Can we see the ratio between cost of health care and median yearly salary, for example?
3. What does "average life expectancy at birth mean"? Does it account for countries that have a significantly lower birth rate than the United States? I would guess not, which could significantly affect the perception of the numbers. How does one normalize for something like that?
4. How was the currency conversion rate computed? Currency prices fluctuate throughout the year, did they account for that? How much does that affect the numbers? Could be a lot, could be a little, but I need to know whether this was taken into account.
5. What does "universal health coverage" mean? Soviet Union had universal health coverage and no medication, surgery performed by under-qualified residents, and no post-surgery care, unless you know someone or bribe the doctor, of course.
6. Surely there are countries without universal health care other than the U.S. and Mexico - how do they stack up?
7. I'm willing to bet a country like Poland has a lot more homeless people that don't factor into the life expectancy numbers than the U.S. That begs a more general question of whether the same methodology was used for computing the cost or life expectancy for each country. If they simply took official numbers from each country, it's almost certain that they were computed differently. Was this accounted for? If not, I need to know. If yes, how were the numbers normalized?
One could probably come up with dozens of questions like these. Of course any analysis of a problem that complex can be called into question, that doesn't mean every analysis is useless. But before we can seriously discuss this graph, or base any policy decisions on it, they at least have to provide the methodology. It doesn't look like this graph is intellectually honest to me, and the burden of proof is on the author.
[+] [-] cwan|16 years ago|reply
I'm sympathetic to this argument given that the American healthcare system is considerably different than many healthcare systems globally in that private insurers acting on behalf of employers (not the users of healthcare) pick up a significant portion of the pie (even if, on a per capita basis, Medicare spending is more than most countries like Canada - though this fact alone begs the question of why the US government wouldn't first seek to fix Medicare).
As a Canadian, the one thing I don't quite understand is how many of my countrymen are so quick to condemn the American system despite all the obvious signs that the Canadian system is unsustainable and failing (http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive...). Further, you read about Animal farm like anecdotes (to be fair, I've seen first hand some of this in Canada as well), and you wonder whether or not healthcare systems abroad can really be distinctly categorized between those that are "universal" and "non-universal" given how radically different implementation is - an example from Japan here: http://biglizards.net/blog/archives/2010/01/my_family_the_v....
There are at least 2 other big problems with this graph if presumably it's being used to argue for changes in policy:
(1) The measurement of life expectancy "at birth". The US spends a considerable amount of money aggressively attempting to treat what would otherwise be considered stillborns. (2) The lifestyles of Americans that may have nothing at all to do with healthcare implementation (http://www.usnews.com/health/family-health/articles/2008/04/...) - ie this could very well mean that if the US miraculously grew an entirely public and universal healthcare system as modeled against XYZ country, US life expectancy might not necessarily get any cheaper or better - it is entirely possible that it would become more expensive and worse.
[+] [-] SamAtt|16 years ago|reply
Graphs like this are designed to create a visceral response but rationally they mean very little if not accompanied by an item by item breakdown of why the numbers are what they are.
For example, the Canadian system puts price limits on patented medicines while the U.S. system does not. That has nothing to do with being a Single Payer system but is definitely a factor that contributes to higher costs in the U.S.
[+] [-] anigbrowl|16 years ago|reply
The US spends considerable amount of money aggressively attempting to treat what would otherwise be considered stillborns.
I regret to inform you that this particular meme is without foundation. I have had extensive discussions with UK and Euro obstetricians about it and the story that there is some massively divergent standard of care or different administrative classification for births involving medical complications is complete BS, from the same people who go about asserting that family planning is a single step away from forced abortions. The measurement of statistics for things like live births and so forth rely on standardized UN definitions, same as US statistics.
[+] [-] gruseom|16 years ago|reply
Canadians' responses to the US are not a rational phenomenon. They're rooted in our identity issues and aren't amenable to argument. This is a (the?) fundamental fact of (English) Canadian history right from the beginning.
It doesn't follow that all our responses are wrong; as far as I can tell they tend to fall along a spectrum. But it's a real weakness that we can't be more objective. It leads us to accept and defend substandard things about ourselves that we could otherwise set about improving... your example being exhibit #1.
[+] [-] chrischen|16 years ago|reply
However I'm still a large proponent of not only life as a right, but healthcare too.
[+] [-] chrischen|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] olefoo|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] walkon|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hs|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] elblanco|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] scythe|16 years ago|reply
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_in_Mexico#Public_he...
[+] [-] axod|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kadavy|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] revorad|16 years ago|reply
It's good that Tufte has made concepts like data-to-ink density popular. But I urge you to actually evaluate that value when you look at a graph and refrain from using it to merely signal your knowledge of the right buzzwords.
[1]http://www.stat.columbia.edu/~cook/movabletype/archives/2009...
[+] [-] borism|16 years ago|reply
however, may I point out that life expectancy at birth is pretty poor measure of healthcare efficiency.
japanese are living very long lives, but it is no secret that depression and suicide is the major problem there, especially in younger generations.
[+] [-] whyme|16 years ago|reply