The US spent ~2X other high-income countries on medical care, yet US utilization rates were largely similar to those in other nations. Prices of labor & goods, including pharmaceuticals, & administrative costs appeared to be major drivers of the di
RT @Cluster_buster: If we put the 1% in charge of paying for healthcare instead of profiting from healthcare, things might be different. ht…
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/Lkq8jRlg2g #amuqrp
Why is #health care spending in the United States so much greater than in other high-income countries?, asks @JAMA_current. https://t.co/8ZwBHLK7Q7 #insurance
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/uigy1Bipo3 https://t.co/lyKSPkyqmG
The United States spent approximately twice as much as other high-income countries on medical care, yet utilization rates were largely similar to those in other nations. Prices of labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals and devi…https://t.co/0BMNlVE7Gs
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/BD7ZiOlALG
RT @UNMC_DrKhan: Updated study suggests we at least get the same quality of care despite spending about double compared to other high incom…
RT @oniquet: « USA spent nearly twice as much as 10 high-income countries on medical care and performed less well on many population health…
RT @MartinBell1966: Report on US healthcare spending with comparisons...#medlearn https://t.co/YDiYwCfVUz
« USA spent nearly twice as much as 10 high-income countries on medical care and performed less well on many population health outcomes. » https://t.co/plxxk193gx
RT @drandrewb: must read @JAMA_current for international health policy by @IPapanicolas @lwoskie @ashishkjha https://t.co/azABZohaRl rai…
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/ugLwiSIADb
RT @WorldHealthSmt: In 2016, the United States spent nearly twice as much on medical care as 10 high-income countries - and... https://t.co…
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @AndrewMIbrahim: Rising costs of US healthcare largely due to higher prices, not necesssrily higher utilization or more specialists https://t.co/8BeR4lhU0J https://t.co/NlqVpFEjLI
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @snirody: 1/2 So is spend healthcare higher in the U.S. almost entirely due to price - per https://t.co/Eo0kd54akm - or is it due to 'ph…
RT @snirody: Some other pushback https://t.co/wgLmB3bEU4 to the article 'Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Co…
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries. https://t.co/YaIBWrheB2 /via @JAMA_current @LSEHealthPolicy @WorldHealthSmt
RT @AndrewMIbrahim: Rising costs of US healthcare largely due to higher prices, not necesssrily higher utilization or more specialists http…
“Prices of labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals, and administrative costs appeared to be the major drivers of the difference in overall cost between the United States and other high-income countries.” https://t.co/JEkg3yIKHm
Prices of labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals and devices, and administrative costs appeared to be the main drivers of the differences in spending. https://t.co/Ct51fqyhno
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/iQYGLvnv9O
RT @pascalroche_: Aux US, les dépenses de santé représentent près de 18% du PNB, presque le double des 10 pays les plus développés. Pour de…
RT @thejhcaldwell: #healthcare Let’s talk numbers. 90% vs 99-100%. 55.3% of that 90% is private insurance (a.k.a for profit healthcare pr…
Not fully digested this but seems interesting (if not that surprising). https://t.co/HUB3133KV8
Aux US, les dépenses de santé représentent près de 18% du PNB, presque le double des 10 pays les plus développés. Pour des résultats médicaux mitigés. Coût du travail, des biens et médicaments sont parmi les facteurs explicatifs clés #health https://t.co/W
Why is #healthcare spending in the 🇺🇸 so much greater than in other high-income countries? https://t.co/1r3GEdUzNH https://t.co/q1WgMd4XgY
Health Care Spending in the U.S. and Other High-Income Countries. Prices of labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals and devices, and administrative costs appeared to be the main drivers of the differences in spending. https://t.co/fwcim1JtmC
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/IzBj6v84aZ
Report on US healthcare spending with comparisons...#medlearn https://t.co/YDiYwCfVUz
Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has similar primary care / specialist mix 3 Has much higher admin costs 4 Pays lots more for… https://t.co/9BQR0IrOsD by #HarvardChanSPH… h
RT @pvh: Why is healthcare so expensive in the US? A brand new detailed comparative analysis: https://t.co/m02rbxGLIy
RT @KevinCarson1: The US has shittier healthcare, at double the price, of other Western countries https://t.co/AiVfxDcEiX
Why is healthcare so expensive in the US? A brand new detailed comparative analysis: https://t.co/m02rbxGLIy
RT @thejhcaldwell: #healthcare Let’s talk numbers. 90% vs 99-100%. 55.3% of that 90% is private insurance (a.k.a for profit healthcare pr…
RT @thejhcaldwell: #healthcare Let’s talk numbers. 90% vs 99-100%. 55.3% of that 90% is private insurance (a.k.a for profit healthcare pr…
RT @alihartmanPT: "Given that other high-income countries are able to spend less and achieve better health outcomes, a more nuanced, data-d…
RT @ashishkjha: Inspired by Uwe, @IPapanicolas @lwoskie & I did a dive deep into US healthcare spending...and WHY it looks so different fro…
RT @thejhcaldwell: #healthcare Let’s talk numbers. 90% vs 99-100%. 55.3% of that 90% is private insurance (a.k.a for profit healthcare pr…
RT @CharlieNeck: In 2016, the US spent nearly twice as much as 10 high-income countries on medical care and performed less well on many pop…
#healthcare Let’s talk numbers. 90% vs 99-100%. 55.3% of that 90% is private insurance (a.k.a for profit healthcare providers). Highest infant mortality (5.8 per 1k live births). Workforce is comparable. Read for more. https://t.co/SJOeGBYkg4
RT @BobbyBoon3: Healthcare in the United States expensive... And many don’t Have access to routine health care https://t.co/JAVY6DMx1T
Mad about how high your healthcare premiums are? Prices of labor and goods are too high. Read… https://t.co/WsxAalSCFl
Healthcare in the United States expensive... And many don’t Have access to routine health care https://t.co/JAVY6DMx1T
Why is health care spending in the United States so much greater than in other high-income countries? https://t.co/ftqPr7pgN7
The United States spends nearly twice as much as 10 high-income countries on medical care and perform less well on many population health outcomes. https://t.co/0iESU4cZbk
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/WwT6UcTjFl
The United States spent approximately twice as much as other high-income countries on medical care, yet utilizati... https://t.co/RU86rJ6GxI
RT @docelovitz: We don't have to accept this. We can and should do so much better #sciencematters #momsmatter #babiesmatter https://t.co/XO…
RT @docelovitz: We don't have to accept this. We can and should do so much better #sciencematters #momsmatter #babiesmatter https://t.co/XO…
RT @ChristianCooper: Single payer removes the creation of negative externalities & the extraction of this capital to the private sector say…
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/fwG2rq0rwk
"Our national debate is centered on providing cheaper medical insurance, where it should be about providing cheaper health care. Insurance is a hedge against unforeseen costs, not a primary payment method." https://t.co/VF5RlNK4fT
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @DMAronoff: Powerful study. US had the highest infant mortality, neonatal mortality and maternal mortality of all high income countries.…
#UShealthcare: Utterly inadequate despite spending twice as much as other rich nations!! :-/// https://t.co/jiMMapGYIZ
“Prices of labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals and devices, and administrative costs appeared to be the main drivers of the differences in spending.” https://t.co/dRKmXyGqHg
RT @docelovitz: We don't have to accept this. We can and should do so much better #sciencematters #momsmatter #babiesmatter https://t.co/XO…
RT @JAMA_current: Why is #healthcarespending in the United States so much greater than in other high-income countries? Find out in this spe…
RT @DMAronoff: Powerful study. US had the highest infant mortality, neonatal mortality and maternal mortality of all high income countries.…
We must also consider the high cost of education for our healthcare providers, malpractice insurance, R&D, other practice costs, and other expenses in the equation. https://t.co/sxfCI2S8sY
In 2016, the US spent nearly twice as much as 10 high-income countries on medical care and performed less well on many population health outcomes. Prices of labor, pharmaceuticals, devices, and administrative costs appeared to be the main cause. https://t.
RT @DMAronoff: Powerful study. US had the highest infant mortality, neonatal mortality and maternal mortality of all high income countries.…
America spends more than any other nation on #healthcare per capita, yet does not achieve corresponding results. We NEED more discussion and trials exploring new ways to optimize the system. #health #healthreform #healthcosts https://t.co/kjkPBk7ufM
RT @DMAronoff: Powerful study. US had the highest infant mortality, neonatal mortality and maternal mortality of all high income countries.…
RT @chngin_the_wrld: Important US regional differences in these rates too, and some are RISING. Of course, it has *nothing* to do with acc…
We spend 2x as much on health care for worse results. Why? The high cost is labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals and devices, and administrative costs. Why are our elected officials not focused on this instead of so many other pointless squabbles. h
" In 2016, the United States spent nearly twice as much as 10 high-income countries on medical care and performed less well on many population health outcomes. Contrary to some explanations for high spending, social spending and h…https://t.co/Zmy3NEpukb
RT @enenbee: @picardonhealth And based on this @JAMA_current article comparing 11 resource-rich countries, net income of Canadian physician…
LESS CARE but more money spent - why the USA does poorly compared to other high-income countries. https://t.co/VxzUDPogGs
LESS CARE but more money spent - why the USA does poorly compared to other high-income countries. https://t.co/f2DLa2c7Xj
RT @DMAronoff: Powerful study. US had the highest infant mortality, neonatal mortality and maternal mortality of all high income countries.…
https://t.co/R5XZCnsKc6 Why the discussion of value (improving quality; lowering costs) in health care, including ICU care, must continue.
RT @gsmartinmd: Comparative #healthcare spending between #USA and similar nations, by @ashishkjha, showing greatest disparity is admin cost…
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
The United States spent approximately twice as much as other high-income countries on medical care, yet utilization https://t.co/f0ukXhNjmx https://t.co/wAY3gDAfZf
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @DMAronoff: Powerful study. US had the highest infant mortality, neonatal mortality and maternal mortality of all high income countries.…
RT @DMAronoff: Powerful study. US had the highest infant mortality, neonatal mortality and maternal mortality of all high income countries.…
RT @docelovitz: We don't have to accept this. We can and should do so much better #sciencematters #momsmatter #babiesmatter https://t.co/XO…
RT @chngin_the_wrld: Important US regional differences in these rates too, and some are RISING. Of course, it has *nothing* to do with acc…
RT @chngin_the_wrld: Important US regional differences in these rates too, and some are RISING. Of course, it has *nothing* to do with acc…
https://t.co/ZV0KnXZUGf The United States spent approximately twice as much as other high-income countries on medical care, yet utilization rates were largely similar to those in other nations. Prices of labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals and devic
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…
RT @prof_cameron: This is a different perspective on why USA has twice the costs and worse outcomes - admin costs + high prices seem to be…
This is a different perspective on why USA has twice the costs and worse outcomes - admin costs + high prices seem to be the main drivers....lessons for the rest of us. https://t.co/xh8nJamqOo
RT @ashishkjha: Key findings from our @JAMA_current paper: Compared to others, the U.S.: 1 Looks about the same on utilization 2 Has si…