Daryl wrote:I'd like to see statistics on the statement "You talk as though your health care and that of the rest of the western world generated as many innovations and cures as ours have. That is simply not true".
Fully concede that the US has pioneered many medical breakthroughs and has top notch researchers, but you'd expect that in a large and wealthy country. Many innovations come from the first world countries as well (penicillin, cochlear, HPV vaccine etc). Considering that there are 15 US citizens for each Australian, it may well be that we produce more innovation per person than you do. It is actually difficult to differentiate, as much research is done by international cooperation now. I probably should explain that most countries that have a welfare medical net also have private medical systems that you can pay to access, and often the public system pays to access them as well. I personally use a mixture in that our Medicare pays for my GP consultations, yet a family member recently had an operation in a private hospital that cost my health fund $22k. Our universities have medical research departments, just as yours do.
As to another quote "It amazes me that the same people who bitch about the US intervening in foreign countries are the same people who presume to impose their values on the US. If you don't like the US the way it is, stay away." my response is deal. Impossible for me to visit anyway as my wife is so vehemently opposed to so many US values and stances, she'd never agree. Pity, as I'd like to have seen some of your beautiful countryside.
One area we may well agree on is the excessive cost of many medical services. I've got no problem with a GP getting $50 a consultation out of which they have to pay staff, insurance, office expenses and so on, and I have no problem paying my oncologist (internationally recognised) about $125 a consultation; but some specialists here charge $300+ for a short consultation that often has no benefit.
Alright, Daryl, here is that cite.
http://history1900s.about.com/library/misc/blnobelmed.htmI use the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine as a proxy for innovations. The correlation between winning the prize and acutal innovations isn't perfect but close enough for government work in the US.
Since 1901 there have been 199 winners: US-99 and Rest of world-100. The predominance of US winners came after 1950. Here is a breakdown.
----------------US----Rest of World
1901-2011----99----1001901-1950-------13----43
1951-1979-------42----25
1980-2011-------42----31
Population-----------US-----------Total World
1900 population 76,212,168 1,700,000,000
4.5%
2013 Population 317,022,000 7,122,900,000
4.5%
Economy---------------------US------------Total World
GDP 2013 (millions) 15,684,800 71,666,350
World Bank 21.9%
GDP 1980 (millions) 2,862,475 11,471,357
IMF 25.0%
As you can see the US economy has been roughly 20%-25% of the world economy for the past 30 years. Prior to that it might have been higher as the rest of the world rebuilt from WWII. The US population has remained at about 4.5% of the world population for the past 110 years or so.
So in the past 30 years the US has produced 42 of the 73 Nobel Prize winners in Physiology and Medicine. The rest of the world produced 31. That means our 4.5% of the world population using between 20%-25% of world economic output produced 57.5% of the Nobel Prize winners in Medicine.
I stand by my statements. I like the innovations in medicine our old system produced and don't see enough proof that a change will benefit us more to make a change.
The goal of helping the poor buy insurance can be achieved without risking the rest of the system. Only 53% of the uninsured fall below 2x the poverty level. That's $23,000 for a single wage earner or $47,000 for a family of 4. That's only 22 million or so and medicaide can be expanded to help them. Heck, subsidies to help they buy insurance would be less expensive and less risky to the innovation engine we had. The remaining insinsured or another 22 million people DO NOT WANT IT. They took the gamble that they will not fall sick and so did not purchase healthcare insurance. That is their right in a free society.
http://aspe.hhs.gov/health/reports/05/uninsured-cps/index.htm#age http://www.medicaid.gov/Medicaid-CHIP-Program-Information/By-Topics/Eligibility/Downloads/2013-Federal-Poverty-level-charts.pdfAgain, my point holds. The cost to making these changes are not sufficient for most Americans to adopt a completely new system that has been shown to produce fewer innovations/break-throughs per given level of resources. We in the US are happy to let the rest of the world enjoy the fruits of our labor. But to produce such fruit we need a system that rewards innovation. This POS Obamacare will not.