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The views expressed herein are the personal views of each individual author or commenter and are not intended to reflect the views of The Ojai Post or its Authors, Tribal Core or Tyler Suchman as managing editor.

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U.S. slipping in life expectancy rankings

Our healthcare system, what we eat, drink and smoke, and how we treat people with the fewest means, is atrocious.

[Dr. Christopher] Murray, [head of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at] the University of Washington, said improved access to health insurance could increase life expectancy. But, he predicted, the U.S. won't move up in the world rankings as long as the health care debate is limited to insurance.

Policymakers also should focus on ways to reduce cancer, heart disease and lung disease, said Murray. He advocates stepped-up efforts to reduce tobacco use, control blood pressure, reduce cholesterol and regulate blood sugar.

"Even if we focused only on those four things, we would go along way toward improving health care in the United States," Murray said. "The starting point is the recognition that the U.S. does not have the best health care system. There are still an awful lot of people who think it does."

[UPDATE] The NY Times has a scathing editorial today, World’s Best Medical Care?...

Fairness. The United States ranks dead last on almost all measures of equity because we have the greatest disparity in the quality of care given to richer and poorer citizens. Americans with below-average incomes are much less likely than their counterparts in other industrialized nations to see a doctor when sick, to fill prescriptions or to get needed tests and follow-up care.

Comments (2)

The NY Times opinion piece is good insofar as it describes a problem, but doesn't say much, if anything, about why the problem exists.

Tyler, thanks for posting this. A nice follow up to my controversial critique. I suspect that the reason why the NY Times does not want to get into our country's lagging health statistics is a consequence of their sponsors and other corporate ties. It is obvious to me our health problems in this country are a consequence of many factors. One of them being a very successful advertising complex which only has the dollar bill to answer to. There are many others but our media's ability to invent reality has had some dire effects on the collective's notion of individual empowerment accountability.

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