FRONTLINE: sick around the world: five countries: health care systems -- the four basic models PBS:
"These four models should be fairly easy for Americans to understand because we have elements of all of them in our fragmented national health care apparatus. When it comes to treating veterans, we're Britain or Cuba. For Americans over the age of 65 on Medicare, we're Canada. For working Americans who get insurance on the job, we're Germany.
For the 15 percent of the population who have no health insurance, the United States is Cambodia or Burkina Faso or rural India, with access to a doctor available if you can pay the bill out-of-pocket at the time of treatment or if you're sick enough to be admitted to the emergency ward at the public hospital.
The United States is unlike every other country because it maintains so many separate systems for separate classes of people. All the other countries have settled on one model for everybody. This is much simpler than the U.S. system; it's fairer and cheaper, too."
From the truly terrific PBS/Frontline site for "Sick Around the World"
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
FRONTLINE: sick around the world: five countries: health care systems -- the four basic models | PBS
Posted by Christopher M. Hughes, MD at 6:29 PM
Labels: Bismarckian Insurance Plan, Sick Around the World, Single Payer Health Care, Social Health Insurance
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