Medical Errors Are Number 3 Cause of US Deaths, Researchers Say (npr.org)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: A study by researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine says medical errors should rank as the third-leading cause of death in the United States -- and highlights how shortcomings in tracking vital statistics may hinder research and keep the problem out of the public eye. The authors, led by Johns Hopkins surgeon Dr. Martin Makary, call for changes in death certificates to better tabulate fatal lapses in care. In an open letter, they urge the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to immediately add medical errors to its annual list reporting the top causes of death. Based on an analysis of prior research, the Johns Hopkins study estimates that more than 250,000 Americans die each year from medical errors. On the CDC's official list, that would rank just behind heart disease and cancer, which each took about 600,000 lives in 2014, and in front of respiratory disease, which caused about 150,000 deaths. Medical mistakes that can lead to death range from surgical complications that go unrecognized to mix-ups with the doses or types of medications patients receive. The study was published Tuesday in The BMJ, formerly the British Medical Journal.
We spend so much money for so little.
"250,000 Americans die each year from medical errors"
Fuck fighting terrorism. This deserves more attention.
I work for the single payer health care system of Finland on the administrative side (IT & stats related) and partly because of that, health care has always been one of my favorite subjects to discuss. However something I've noticed when talking with Americans about it is a certain type of illusion/fallacy that many seem to be under, which is that because you pay so much for it, it must be the best system out there.
Just yesterday I had a lengthy conversation on fb about the problems with a purely insurance based model, and even though I tried linking a couple of studies as to the amount of deaths caused by lack of access due to costs, I was labeled a liar because apparently 'everyone in the US now has the opportunity to get health insurance" (a direct quote from him) despite the fact that it's known that there are people who do not meet the criteria under the ACA to qualify for the cheaper/low income insurances whilist also not being able to afford a private one AND that there are also still issues with insurances not covering certain operations. Don't get me wrong, the ACA was a small step in a better direction but the gutting of the public option for all sort of killed the best potential about it. Yet my counterpart in said discussion was adamantly of the opinion that anyone who dies in the US for not getting treatment dies purely because he/she didn't bother to get insurance and hence the system is not to blame.
You've plenty of things where you lead the world, and the medical R & D and high level expertise in the US is unparalleled. However I do wish that more Americans would realize how much you're paying for simple base level health care. I've seen hospital invoices from the states where simple over the counter ibuprofen pills are billed at several dollars a piece. That's a a margin of several thousand percentages. The fact that this is allowed is unfathomable to me. Even if one is of the opinion that a life-saving basic service should be allowed to remain a profit-driven business, having no controls on pricing combined with the insurance lobby has created a gigantic price bubble. This is why the US spends combined (private and tax spending) the most money on the planet per capita on health care, and still the results are far from the top. (Source (wiki))
The profit motive needs to be either removed or curtailed heavily, so that more of the money that's spent can actually be used to improve the level of care and oversight, instead of just increasing the profits of the insurance giants and private hospitals.
We get comparable treatment results and universal coverage (at about 3500 dollars a year per capita) than the US does when it comes to life expectancy, cancer survival rates (in fact, with certain types of cancers we're ahead of the US even) and so on. You spend more than DOUBLE that (8700 dollars according to OECD when totaling private and public spending, though interestingly, the CDC puts this figure even higher at 9500) and the massive increase in spending doesn't get you the kind of results that such an investment should.
You could and should easily be able to arrange for the hands down best universal health care system without spending a dime more than you already are. Don't spend more, spend smarter.
Just my 2 cents, feel free to mod me down for being a socialist scum now.
"It is the business of the future to be dangerous" -Alfred North Whitehead
1) eliminate the health care companies. We need direct pay!
The costs are too large to not have either insurance companies or the government involved. The majority of Americans would be bankrupted by a single major surgery and that would be true even if healthcare costs weren't completely out of hand.
2) eliminate the AMA. There are not enough doctors. Patients are dying in the emergency room waiting to be seen.
First off, the AMA has nothing to do with the quantity of doctors. They do not directly control the supply of doctors and in fact the number of medical schools has been increasing in the last decade. Second, there is no epidemic of patients "dying in the ER waiting to be seen". Emergency Departments (they aren't typically called Emergency Rooms because - well, they're not a room) are actually quite good at triaging patients and taking care of those in greatest need first. There is however the problem of people coming to the Emergency Department for conditions that clearly are NOT emergencies because our screwed up system gives them no other options.
3) kill all malpractice lawyers. A doctor practising in good faith should never ever be sued
And exactly how do you plan to distinguish between doctors acting in good faith and those that aren't? While the vast majority of doctors are good, hard working people who care greatly about their patients, there are exceptions. Furthermore there sometimes are doctors of questionable competence. An incompetent person acting in good faith is just as dangerous as a competent person acting in bad faith. Either one is dangerous and there has to be a mechanism for dealing with them.
4) curtail the power of the FDA. The FDA does more harm than good.
Spare me. While nobody would argue that the FDA is without problems, the FDA is one of the most successful and vital government organizations we have. Their prime directive is to actually make sure that medical treatments actually work before they can be sold to the public. Without the FDA you would have absurd levels of quackery and fake "treatments" being sold to people who don't know any better. One merely has to look at the market for "alternative medicine" (particularly homeopathy) to see what would happen. You know what they call alternative medicine that is proven to work? Medicine.
There is no difference between big government and big corporations. You do not want you health care being run by the insurance companies or the government.
If you think there is no difference between government and business you don't understand either one adequately. There are no other payment options available without involving either insurance or government. Most countries have (sensibly) picked the government option since EVERYONE needs health care at some point but insurance can be made to work. But unless you are privately wealthy there aren't any third options. Your notion of everyone paying directly is pure fantasy because the costs are and will remain too high to be feasible.
37th rank vs. 38th is hardly much to boast about though.