President Trump took to Twitter early in the morning after the Republicans failed to unite around their monstrous health care bill. He touted his own engagement around the issue of health care, tweeting, “I know the subject well & want victory for U.S.”

Far from what Trump wants, a health care victory for the American people would be establishing a truly universal health care system for all.

As it stands, the US health care model fails in any global ranking. A look at statistics regarding health care systems around the world shows where the US is lacking and highlights the urgent need for universal care in America.

Cost

The US spends much more per person for health care than other countries. At the same time, it is the only major nation that does not provide universal health care.

 

Parental Leave

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a leading source for health care statistics worldwide, recently reported that the US is the only nation among 41 countries that does not require paid parental leave for new parents. This graph from the Pew Research Center breaks down the findings.

 

Cost-Related Barriers to Health Care Access in the US

The Commonwealth Fund, a research organization promoting access to medical services,  did an international survey of 11 nations in 2016. Their research found that adults in the US are “far more likely than those in other countries to go without needed care because of costs and to struggle to afford basic necessities such as housing and healthy food.” The following graph based on the Commonwealth Fund’s research demonstrates that among the selected countries, the US leads in cost-related barriers to health care access.

 

Global Comparisons to US Health Care

Findings from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development were utilized for these CNN infographics comparing US health care access and quality to other nations.

Universal Coverage

A 2010 medical research paper on health care systems around the world found that the following countries, highlighted in green, provide some type of universal health care plan. It is notable that the US, in spite of its high expenditures on health care and large GDP, is the only major nation in the world that does not provide universal health care to its citizens.

“At its root, the lack of health care for all in America is fundamentally a moral issue,” an article from the American Medical Students Association (AMSA) explains. “The United States is the only industrialized nation that does not have some form of universal health care (defined as a basic guarantee of health care to all of its citizens).”

“Is it indeed acceptable to deny people health care based on their ability to pay?” the AMSA writes. “Or is health care a basic need that should be provided to every American as a matter of course? If the answer is the latter, then we need to […] create a society in which health care is available to all.”

Benjamin Dangl has a PhD in history from McGill University and is the editor of TowardFreedom.com, a progressive perspective on world events.


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Ben studied writing and literature at Bard College and Latin American history and literature at the Universidad Nacional de Cuyo in Mendoza, Argentina. He is the author of the book The Price of Fire: Resource Wars and Social Movements in Bolivia (AK Press, 2007), which has been published in Spanish by Plural Editores in Bolivia and in Tamil by The New Century Publishing House in Tamil Nadu, India. Dangl is also a contributor to Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Latin American Issues (McGraw-Hill, 2006). Dangl has worked as a journalist covering politics and social issues in Latin America for over six years, writing for publications such as The Guardian Unlimited, The Nation Magazine, The Progressive, Utne Reader, CounterPunch, Alternet, Common Dreams, Z Magazine, La Estrella de Panama and dozens of other media outlets. He has received two Project Censored Awards from Sonoma University for his investigative reports on US government and military intervention in Latin America. Dangl has been interviewed on a variety of news programs including the BBC and Democracy Now!.Dangl teaches Latin American history and politics and globalization at Burlington College in Vermont. He is the founder and editor of Upside Down World, a publication on politics and social movements in Latin America, and works as the editor of Toward Freedom, a progressive perspective on world events.He has been a participant in various anti-war and anti-globalization movements in the US and elsewhere in the Americas. Dangl is also a member of the Burlington, VT Homebrewer's Co-op. writing at www.bendangl.net

1 Comment

  1. I lived in two Latin American countries for many years. They were quite different, one smaller and less developed than the other. Nonehteless, my cost for health care each month was less than a single visit to a doctor in the United States, and I am talking about the lowest range of visit that Ben cites here for the U.S. ($30 to $200). Plus, in each country there were public hospitals where people can go for free.

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