@Dr2chase @AbbyCScience I’m not sure, but this article shows that other countries have lower prices and less administrative overhead with overall similar patterns of utilization. https://t.co/qM6Z3wSRUX
"Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries" https://t.co/Is4Q8kjNyb
@Element92184127 @DrFroudek @UrOnlineCourage @BernieSanders in fact, other countries with uhc have comparable health care utilization rates and infrastructure as our own system, except it doesn't bankrupt their citizens, while being substantially cheaper o
@Noahpinion A well known medical article on expenses does not correction for GDP at all. If you plot GDP per health expenses directly from this article, you get a ~40% excess cost number. Article implies a 100% effect. So this seems like a real analytic pr
@TheAlexLekas @godofradio @PolitiFact @KHNews The systems of our peer countries do work. If they didn't, they wouldn't be popular. https://t.co/dguAa6Wz3v
@jacketfan2 @MenckenWasRight @JohnFromCranber @BernieSanders The JAMA would like to disagree. https://t.co/RwAZEanfHG
@photoartist9 https://t.co/Nsn9mdIBMY “Prices of labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals and devices, and administrative costs appeared to be the main drivers of the differences in spending.”
@jeversmma @DjbrowB @benshapiro Quoting from this article https://t.co/gpblo3LOkJ
"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/Q7PUn1l0hb
@sweenprs @DanARestrepo @NGrossman81 good point. wouldn’t deny that as a variable in morbidity. data suggests, though that “utilization” in usa is similar to that of like countries —which argues against your point, though we’d have to dig deeper. https:/
@georgevaccaro @TheRealAnsky Journal of the American Medical Association. Whatever the system, other countries are more efficient. They all happen to have single-payer? Yes. https://t.co/asABb7xzb5 https://t.co/OF7GGEiaum
@amychomd @thats_bone I don't think we want to get into a "wait-times" debate with that analogy in favor of the current system... https://t.co/il0jKjcJfQ https://t.co/BEpsViFLfu
@dnepo https://t.co/XskZoDzmv7 The senior author of this excellent 2018 JAMA study gave grand rounds at @BMCSurgery last year. Drivers are administration, cost of Rx, & labor (both RNs & docs), with the former two accounting for the biggest chunk
@TheWonkologist not the gen'l source you are looking for but icymi, "Utilization in the U.S. was similar to those of other nations—except in medical imaging. The U.S. performed the second highest number of imaging exams." + has imaging price comparisons fo
RT @813JAFERD: This is blatantly wrong. We spend 8-15% on Physician services in US. We spend more on Hospitals & admin costs. How does a re…
RT @813JAFERD: This is blatantly wrong. We spend 8-15% on Physician services in US. We spend more on Hospitals & admin costs. How does a re…
@odhinnhrafn @Tena2sweet @BrittanyK182 @PeopleDied2Vote @debshearer1 @SpeakerPelosi 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. https://t.co/6
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @Almond_squirrel: I think what's surprising about this isn't that the US workers get paid the most (duh) but that they don't get paid mu…
I think what's surprising about this isn't that the US workers get paid the most (duh) but that they don't get paid much more than median, showing that all the US's expensive healthcare isn't going to doctors' wages, it's going to insurance and intermediar
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @813JAFERD: This is blatantly wrong. We spend 8-15% on Physician services in US. We spend more on Hospitals & admin costs. How does a re…
RT @813JAFERD: This is blatantly wrong. We spend 8-15% on Physician services in US. We spend more on Hospitals & admin costs. How does a re…
This is blatantly wrong. We spend 8-15% on Physician services in US. We spend more on Hospitals & admin costs. How does a reporter Tweet this when so factually wrong?
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
Seems like supply and demand is working, no? One of the smallest per capita number of physicians which leads to higher wages. Also way mire expensive to become a physician in the US.
Doctors could charge a little less money, as a treat
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
RT @crampell: Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal cover…
Some comparative numbers on remuneration received by health workforce in the US vs. some other countries with universal coverage https://t.co/t9T1rwueQw https://t.co/N6BQPHKfUF
@Rickmayhem @BaconatorWest @therealTomBorum @kathleenelias0 @GenVociferous @hlwberdoo @thebradfordfile @realDonaldTrump If you want more evidence, look at US life expectancy numbers. Our lives are SHORTENING. Infant and maternal mortality numbers are hig
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
Thanks for share @AbdulElSayed! #MedicareForAll
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
@julesyoo This chart seems quite misleading, particularly when the heading asserts causation. If diet were the key driver of health cost ↗️, it would show up as greater utilization of healthcare services in the U.S. vs. other countries. But that is not t
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
The whole debate over Medicare for All is backwards. Everything the health insurance industry and the drug companies warn against to scare us is FAR MORE true of the status quo.
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @AbdulElSayed: Worried about "waiting in line" for healthcare? Well, we already do that in America. Researchers found that women w/ hi…
RT @fr_hossain: The U.S. Spends $2,500 Per Person on Health Care Administrative Costs. Canada Spends $550. Why? https://t.co/Ucxnnxte48 •…
RT @fr_hossain: The U.S. Spends $2,500 Per Person on Health Care Administrative Costs. Canada Spends $550. Why? https://t.co/Ucxnnxte48 •…
RT @fr_hossain: The U.S. Spends $2,500 Per Person on Health Care Administrative Costs. Canada Spends $550. Why? https://t.co/Ucxnnxte48 •…
The U.S. Spends $2,500 Per Person on Health Care Administrative Costs. Canada Spends $550. Why? https://t.co/Ucxnnxte48 • Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/3ojTfHFzh0 #Health #Healthcare #hospital #CEO
@anish_koka @zamishka @shawn_whatley @CAEP_Docs @SRPCanada @JeanneLenzer1 However, the UK compared to USA: - Longer life expectancy total, health-adjusted, and for men and women >40 yo - Better maternal mortality, infant mortality, neonatal deaths and l
@anish_koka @shawn_whatley @CAEP_Docs @SRPCanada @JeanneLenzer1 More evidence refuting your claim of "no evidence to suggest..." This JAMA study shows that compared to other countries like the Canadian single payer system, the USA has shorter life expecta
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries | Health Care Reform | JAMA | JAMA Network. Read on. https://t.co/xoyx3zO4ud
One commenter on my tweet below noted that prices should be normalized to GDP/capita. I did that for the countries in the article (you have to open the image to see the top dot, which of course is the US). In that model, prices are merely 40% and not 2x, t
#US #healthcare Reform https://t.co/m6CvThhq1w #healthcare Spending https://t.co/MqnhWbPTus #Income & #life Expectancy https://t.co/U6gnJU6ICJ Eliminating Waste in #healthcare https://t.co/JOwGlHXOFQ Silencing the #Science on Gun Research https://t
@JAMA_current posts its most important articles of the decade. This one on healthcare spending & outcome is still mind-boggling. US spends much more than other affluent countries & has shorter life expectancy, higher infant mortality, & fewer o
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries | Health Care Reform | JAMA | JAMA Network. One of the top articles of the decade. We pay more for less! https://t.co/XVzmILF0xQ
@Speaking4m @MarkBourrie @CaitlinKellyNYC And yet you can't link to any of this "research". Here's a JAMA article with some actual comparisons. https://t.co/svRnSgk5gW In 2016, the US spent 17.8% of its GDP on health care, and spending in the other countri
@adanbart @Tash_Witk @BernieSanders To zdaje się dane z raportu opublikowanego w "Journal of the American Medical Association" z marca 2018 roku. https://t.co/CnrXeEfryW Skrót: https://t.co/hfyU1xJrIH https://t.co/00v8gvEu3p
@DanielJafari @RogueRad Data might help. "General physicians in America made an average of $218,173 in 2016, ... double the average of generalists in the other countries, where pay ranged from $86,607 in Sweden to $154,126 in Germany." https://t.co/14OQV
Lot's of docs are attacking this. Actual data might help. "General physicians in America made an average of $218,173 in 2016, ... double the average of generalists in the other countries, where pay ranged from $86,607 in Sweden to $154,126 in Germany." ht
@NickSawyerMD @ezraklein @netflix Let's try to stick to the facts, at least as best as we can. The main driver of differences in healthcare spending between the US and other developed countries appear to be the cost of the inputs... including wages of prov
How well funded is the NHS? By international standards, terribly! In this survey in 2018, UK put in 28% less than Germany, 22% less than France, and Sweden / Denmark / Switzerland / Netherlands all put in over 40% more (per person) /2 https://t.co/zKvv8
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…
@DrAntoParavati @DrSpratticus Not a contemporary dataset to the about graph and not 100% on point to answer question, but compelling data showing high administrative spending and poorer comparative outcomes relative to other countries: https://t.co/gh5spW2
@afneil So there is evidence that generics are more widely used and cheaper is the US https://t.co/TZzCbR2E4G. However, the US spends twice as much on meds compared to other G7 economies due to patents https://t.co/ThymBoKffP. Patented meds is what trade n
@BobDohertyACP @acpinternist Curious as to your thoughts on this JAMA paper last year. It found hospital costs dont explain higher US costs vs peer nations. Rather drugs, admin costs, outpatient costs, elective procedures, & rad testing did. US better