RT @Incontrolovely: @diegoebarros Sobre medicación, excesivo gasto en diagnóstico y gastos administrativos, todo gracias a un sistema sanit…
@diegoebarros Sobre medicación, excesivo gasto en diagnóstico y gastos administrativos, todo gracias a un sistema sanitario que financia la sanidad privada con recursos públicos: https://t.co/CdiGeiArJJ Aquí el estudio: https://t.co/dHd9jHW4gb
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/5VF0q9b8sK
tl;dr It's still the prices, stupid.
@BetsyDeVosED America has the most free-market based healthcare of any developed economy. It pays $10,209 per year per person in 2017. The Journal of the American Medical Association says that’s around twice as much as most high-income countries: https://t
@LouSouthFla @washingtonpost Warren plan: 25 Trillion over 10 years. Current Cost all in: $52 Trillion over 10 yrs. That’s why establishment is whining like stuck pigs. https://t.co/czWy2U1Ro8
@BrianSachs @JohnTuckerPhD @Noahpinion Probably the best paper I’ve read on the subject by the ever-brilliant @ashishkjha https://t.co/OGQ99YTHUR
@washingtonpost US pays twice v.any Top 11 high income nation;has terrible health outcomes; life expectancy 79yrs v. 84yrs; 8% cost admin v. 3-5%; 90% covered v.98-100%; US infant mortality highest, US health cost to GDP tops 20%; growing; unsustainable. A
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries #warren2020 #teamwarren #elizabethwarren #pdx4warren https://t.co/3W2wwpTqqX
@amitabhchandra2 This is a clearly false statement, which conflicts with a mountain of research and evidence, assembled over at least 20 years. "Technological innovation" is not remotely "the principal driver of costs." https://t.co/Ibx0EVANrc https://t
@joethepatriotic @Marcus_Porcius2 @ewarren You’ve got to be joking. The US health care system on a cost benefit basis is a massive under performer. Unless you think paying twice what everyone else does for largely worse outcomes is “best”. https://t.co/ca
Government has never made anything better and cheaper...except public goods (roads, bridges, and yes, schools) and goods & services in natural monopoly markets, especially ones with inelastic demand, like healthcare. See: https://t.co/ORIZXcW5Yz
RT @humanprovince: Only a provincial dipshit thinks that Denmark is backwards. Denmark beats the US on pretty much any health indicator you…
RT @humanprovince: Only a provincial dipshit thinks that Denmark is backwards. Denmark beats the US on pretty much any health indicator you…
RT @humanprovince: Only a provincial dipshit thinks that Denmark is backwards. Denmark beats the US on pretty much any health indicator you…
Only a provincial dipshit thinks that Denmark is backwards. Denmark beats the US on pretty much any health indicator you can imagine. Only an ignorant rich asshole would prefer US healthcare outcomes to those in Denmark: https://t.co/yjuQz152lh
@ne0liberal The question is "as compared to what?" and when we talk about the expenditures in the US, it's generally "as compared to the outcomes/level of payment of other countries"; This is a good, recent review that is close to the 'consensus' position:
Gasto en países de altos ingresos. Diferencias importantes en EU con respecto a otros países. https://t.co/NnzhzHTsOI https://t.co/y4SNRlYGtY
RT @KUSAURAP: アメリカの医療費がクッソ高い理由 https://t.co/O2BitcaMHE
RT @KUSAURAP: アメリカの医療費がクッソ高い理由 https://t.co/O2BitcaMHE
アメリカの医療費がクッソ高い理由 https://t.co/O2BitcaMHE
@egg_descrambler or put your teeth in this https://t.co/FmwaRNOPLU
@silicon_hawk @ronconnelly @ErikJLarsen @rfloreslv @AOC The source is the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. These facts aren't in dispute and easy to find. Here is another summary from JAMA https://t.co/3w3Gul4MQq
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
#healthcare spending- you don’t get what you pay for
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
RT @sunsopeningband: Thread. 👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻 https://t.co/LRfACKll2o
Thread. 👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
RT @psirides: Here’s the spending rankings: https://t.co/jlAld6fjMD https://t.co/K6vm74DaW4
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
Read this thread highlighting US #healthcare spending/outcomes compared to other high-income countries #foodforthought
Here’s the spending rankings: https://t.co/jlAld6fjMD https://t.co/K6vm74DaW4
RT @psirides: And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
And whilst I’m reading journals, this JAMA paper is pretty damn interesting. https://t.co/FbyU48rlac https://t.co/w1vFoa3NWC
@CliffordCOlive1 @TheTurtleClub @w_terrence Germany, Switzerland, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, The Netherlands, etc. Refute the data, moron: https://t.co/m2yxBTFBW2
@CliffordCOlive1 @TheTurtleClub @w_terrence Screenshots aren’t proof. Where’s your data? Healthcare is more expensive here than in any other developed nation and that’s one of the reasons so many fall into poverty. https://t.co/m2yxBTFBW2
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/FRyQa7RAtA
RT @KivaBay: pew pew motherfucker https://t.co/LQEnxWO2Se
RT @KivaBay: pew pew motherfucker https://t.co/LQEnxWO2Se
RT @KivaBay: pew pew motherfucker https://t.co/LQEnxWO2Se
pew pew motherfucker https://t.co/LQEnxWO2Se
@sacjai Agree with all those points! But it’s not just utilization - it’s prices too: https://t.co/wbg1fBs0l8
@scottregenbogen @michiganvalue Yes, because spending sounds like the amount of money used. I worry that "price-standardized spending" abstracts away the #1 reason that US healthcare spending is highest in the world. (I think we understand each other, so
@DeBaule @ungazetier @DEYCatherine1 @franceinter mieux qu'un "non je crois", j'ai des preuves: https://t.co/6AVwsRcE7Z Les USA sont littéralement le pire système de santé sur la plupart des indicateurs quand on compare aux pays développés. Notamment le pri
@scary_biscuits @rofitz22 The link of debt to overly high US salaries has been proven to be poor on too many occasions & blocks moving toward universal health care. It is clearly shown that the average salary for a US physician is $218,173 and needs t
RT @mendel_random: US health care is crazy, highest expenditure on health across high income countries, worst outcomes for life expectancy,…
RT @mendel_random: US health care is crazy, highest expenditure on health across high income countries, worst outcomes for life expectancy,…
"For discharges for mental and behavioral conditions, the United States was below the mean of all 11 countries (679 per 100 000 population compared with a mean of 736 per 100 000 population)". Easy to do with less beds and access. https://t.co/cbxbr6XKp
@steyerb "Healthcare Spending Driven by Price, Not Utilization" https://t.co/zwdzsfkLz8
RT @aki_alzubaidi: Anyone care that the US spends twice as much as other highly developed countries on healthcare but performs at the botto…
Anyone care that the US spends twice as much as other highly developed countries on healthcare but performs at the bottom? Let’s find out at this first session on cost effectiveness of guided bronchs. Let’s start truly talking value #AABIPCON #DefyDisease
RT @Dr_Khan: Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/MX6TdGl2Af /via @JAMA_current @JAMANetw…
RT @JAMA_current: Efforts targeting utilization alone are unlikely to reduce the growth in #healthcare spending in the US; a more concerted…
RT @NicolasArgy: @jbarro @nytdavidbrooks This is an absolutely falsehood. Providers represent 20% of expenses. See the work of Jha and Re…
RT @NicolasArgy: @jbarro @nytdavidbrooks This is an absolutely falsehood. Providers represent 20% of expenses. See the work of Jha and Re…
RT @NicolasArgy: @jbarro @nytdavidbrooks This is an absolutely falsehood. Providers represent 20% of expenses. See the work of Jha and Re…
"US health care spending was found to be higher than in other countries despite similar utilization patterns, suggesting that higher prices were the primary cause of high health care spending in the United States relative to other nations..." https://t.co/
RT @JAMA_current: Efforts targeting utilization alone are unlikely to reduce the growth in #healthcare spending in the US; a more concerted…
RT @JAMA_current: Efforts targeting utilization alone are unlikely to reduce the growth in #healthcare spending in the US; a more concerted…
Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/MX6TdGl2Af /via @JAMA_current @JAMANetwork @LSEnews @LSEHealthPolicy
RT @JAMA_current: Efforts targeting utilization alone are unlikely to reduce the growth in #healthcare spending in the US; a more concerted…
RT @JAMA_current: Efforts targeting utilization alone are unlikely to reduce the growth in #healthcare spending in the US; a more concerted…
RT @JAMA_current: Efforts targeting utilization alone are unlikely to reduce the growth in #healthcare spending in the US; a more concerted…
Efforts targeting utilization alone are unlikely to reduce the growth in #healthcare spending in the US; a more concerted effort to reduce prices and administrative costs is likely needed https://t.co/O7KNFQ6jNK
RT @drjmariomolina: This confirms a study by Uwe Reinhardt from about 15 years ago. There are some minor differences in utilization but the…
Great podcast!! Mostly agree with the latest findings in @JAMA_current Just wondering if the per capita numbers include taxes such as National Insurance in UK? E.g. per capita pharmacy costs are $1450 in US while the other top 10 are $450-$900 range.
RT @drjmariomolina: This confirms a study by Uwe Reinhardt from about 15 years ago. There are some minor differences in utilization but the…
RT @drjmariomolina: This confirms a study by Uwe Reinhardt from about 15 years ago. There are some minor differences in utilization but the…
This confirms a study by Uwe Reinhardt from about 15 years ago. There are some minor differences in utilization but the major difference is not what we do or how frequently we do it but how much we pay for it. It is a unit cost issue.
@hswpodcasts @danweissmann @HowToMoneyPod Great podcast. Really enjoyed it. (And discovered a brand new pod!) Here's some data on US utilization as it compares to other countries. Overall, our utilization is about the same but we pay about 2x as much. It u
395. Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/DILYsUrOR8
@Bobqsmith @asymmetricinfo https://t.co/BFwNaT6quT 110 citations in literature; I have seen it referred to before by various economists, I can find links if you are interested.
Whole papers here: https://t.co/wx1ClSUiSR https://t.co/rF5oUBO7Ax
@paulycham @saywhen78 @da_tells @di_plora @TornettaAnthony @JoJoFromJerz @Alyssa_Milano It's not an opinion piece sir. Now you look stupid. You could avoid that by reading the piece, but you choose to look stupid. That's not my opinion, that's science...
RT @mdhowellmd: @iwashyna .@bobkocher wrote a great 2011 NEJM piece & prob has newer stuff. tl;dr 56% https://t.co/0u6JiySPQX Also, there’…
RT @RicciMilstein: For once, the U.S. is not the most expensive one. For a closer look, also check out @IPapanicolas @JAMA_current paper: h…
RT @RicciMilstein: For once, the U.S. is not the most expensive one. For a closer look, also check out @IPapanicolas @JAMA_current paper: h…
For once, the U.S. is not the most expensive one. For a closer look, also check out @IPapanicolas @JAMA_current paper: https://t.co/nFFZHtmOnG @HarvardChanSPH @LSEHealthPolicy https://t.co/c96zUTw2vc
@iwashyna .@bobkocher wrote a great 2011 NEJM piece & prob has newer stuff. tl;dr 56% https://t.co/0u6JiySPQX Also, there’s some add’l data in Ashish et al’s 2018 paper, esp the supplement. https://t.co/MGuPWpEuls And Moses’ 2013 JAMA piece is a tou
and this almost but not quite gets at it, from @JAMA_current by @ashishkjha and colleagues https://t.co/rCsvDEAfK8 https://t.co/1naQq0VXuQ
@RRsock @toddlemmon @PlanMaestro @scottgreenwood @goldencaskcap The main driver of higher cost is “Prices of labor and goods, including pharmaceuticals, and administrative costs” - that’s drug prices, doctor wages, nurse wages etc, and the extra admin cost
JAMA Health Care Spending in the United States and Other High-Income Countries https://t.co/xLneSzFTK7
@thadsalmonMD @ThisIsOurLane Thad, this one of the best descriptive article showing the differences in healthcare spending of 11 countries. https://t.co/6bxrHolljT
RT @micah_johnson_: @dhfreedman Spending = price x utilization The key point is that US spending is double other countries not because uti…
@dhfreedman Spending = price x utilization The key point is that US spending is double other countries not because utilization is higher, but because prices are higher. That's not tautology, but something we know empirically due to careful research. https
@JTaylor_MDPhD @Paul_Wischmeyer To play devil’s advocate, the US may be a world leader in obesity but it’s not like none of those other countries have similar problems. Your Harvard colleague suggested this https://t.co/NzViAqLa7u which provides interestin
@skathire It's a popular hypothesis, but one data seems to refute (at least re: total social spend vs. effective allocation of spend). "social spending and health care utilization in the United States did not differ substantially from other high-income na