Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Some Americans spend billions to get teeth whiter. Some wait in line to get them pulled. | The Washington Post

Some Americans spend billions to get teeth whiter. Some wait in line to get them pulled. | The Washington Post:



As the distance between rich and poor grows in the United States, few consequences are so overlooked as the humiliating divide in dental care. High-end cosmetic dentistry is soaring, and better-off Americans spend well over $1 billion each year just to make their teeth a few shades whiter.
Millions of others rely on charity clinics and hospital emergency rooms to treat painful and neglected teeth. Unable to afford expensive root canals and crowns, many simply have them pulled. Nearly 1 in 5 Americans older than 65 do not have a single real tooth left.


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Sunday, January 29, 2017

Long Waits for Doctors’ Appointments Have Become the Norm - The New York Times

Long Waits for Doctors’ Appointments Have Become the Norm - The New York Times: "The Commonwealth Fund, a New York-based foundation that focuses on health care, compared wait times in the United States to those in 10 other countries last year. “We were smug and we had the impression that the United States had no wait times — but it turns out that’s not true,” said Robin Osborn, a researcher for the foundation. “It’s the primary care where we’re really behind, with many people waiting six days or more” to get an appointment when they were “sick or needed care.”

The study found that 26 percent of 2,002 American adults surveyed said they waited six days or more for appointments, better only than Canada (33 percent) and Norway (28 percent), and much worse than in other countries with national health systems like the Netherlands (14 percent) or Britain (16 percent). When it came to appointments with specialists, patients in Britain and Switzerland reported shorter waits than those in the United States, but the United States did rank better than the other eight countries.

So it turns out that America has its own waiting problem. But we tend to wait for different types of medical interventions. And that is mainly a result of payment incentives, experts say."



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Friday, January 13, 2017

Uwe E. Reinhardt: U.S. Health Care Prices Are the Elephant in the Room - The New York Times

Uwe E. Reinhardt: U.S. Health Care Prices Are the Elephant in the Room - The New York Times:



In most other countries, prices for health care goods and services are not negotiated between individual health insurers and individual physicians, hospitals or drug companies, as they are in the private insurance sector in United States.
Instead prices there either are set by government or negotiated between associations of insurers and providers of care, on a regional, state or national basis. The single prices for other countries shown in the chart therefore can be taken representative of prices actually paid there.
By contrast, as can be seen in the charts, in the United States there is quite a range of prices for the identical good or service.

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It’s The Prices, Stupid: Why The United States Is So Different From Other Countries

It’s The Prices, Stupid: Why The United States Is So Different From Other Countries:



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