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Americas health system (Read 1758 times)
MeisterEckhart
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #90 - Yesterday at 2:18pm
 
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 2:11pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:03pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 1:52pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Australia has about 5% more life expectancy than USA.
USA has about 30% higher obesity rates.
Obesity would be the cause the difference.

Also, USA has 24% higher rate of suicide, and the average age is well below life expectancy.

So, you’re arguing that faster access to significantly lower cost of healthcare over a lifetime has no effect on life expectancy, then?



I'm just posting numbers that show it's probably way more complex, like possibly that American HEALTH CARE is undoubtedly the best in the world for people who can afford it/have decent insurance and despite it's inequality, the end result is roughly that of Australia when you factor in the obesity/suicide data that I posted.

I have a hunch that if RFK can improve the underlying health of Americans, that may have better net gains than simply providing better health care access.

What you’re missing is that health costs are usually only a major factor in the senior years of life - 65 and over. For Americans it’s better to die early of treatable diseases than possibly be forced into bankruptcy seeking treatment.
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aquascoot
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #91 - Yesterday at 2:27pm
 
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:03pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 1:52pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Australia has about 5% more life expectancy than USA.
USA has about 30% higher obesity rates.
Obesity would be the cause the difference.

Also, USA has 24% higher rate of suicide, and the average age is well below life expectancy.

So, you’re arguing that faster access to significantly lower cost of healthcare over a lifetime has no effect on life expectancy, then?




probably health care does have very little effect.
lifespan also needs to be considered alongside health span

i would imagine many if not most americans live their last 10 years with a major health issue and the hospital system is "prolonging the agony"

good nutrition, good exercise , good interpersonal relationships and good community are vital to good health and are not to be found in the western system.

the japanese eat a much better diet and are not fat .....


Several diets are conducive to the maintenance of good health and to the prevention of cardiovascular disease, for example, the Mediterranean diet, the DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension), the vegetarian diet, and the Japanese diet. We often refer to the Mediterranean Diet in these pages, because it is well established scientifically that this diet is particularly beneficial for cardiovascular health. Knowing that the Japanese have the highest life expectancy among the G7 countries, the special diet in Japan has also captured the attention of experts and an informed public in recent years.

Japanese life expectancy
Among the G7 countries, Japan has the highest life expectancy at birth according to 2016 OECD data, particularly for women. Japanese men have a slightly higher life expectancy (81.1 years) than that of Canadian men (80.9 years), while the life expectancy of Japanese women (87.1 years) is significantly higher (2.4 years) than that of Canadian women (84.7 years). The healthy life expectancy of the Japanese, 74.8 years, is also higher than in Canada (73.2 years).

The higher life expectancy of Japanese people is mainly due to fewer deaths from ischemic heart disease and cancers, particularly breast and prostate cancer. This low mortality is mainly attributable to a low rate of obesity, low consumption of red meat, and high consumption of fish and plant foods such as soybeans and tea. In Japan, the obesity rate is low (4.8% for men and 3.7% for women). By comparison, in Canada 24.6% of adult men and 26.2% of adult women were obese (BMI ≥ 30) in 2016. Obesity is an important risk factor for both ischemic heart disease and several types of cancers.

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Gordon
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #92 - Yesterday at 2:33pm
 
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:18pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 2:11pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:03pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 1:52pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Australia has about 5% more life expectancy than USA.
USA has about 30% higher obesity rates.
Obesity would be the cause the difference.

Also, USA has 24% higher rate of suicide, and the average age is well below life expectancy.

So, you’re arguing that faster access to significantly lower cost of healthcare over a lifetime has no effect on life expectancy, then?



I'm just posting numbers that show it's probably way more complex, like possibly that American HEALTH CARE is undoubtedly the best in the world for people who can afford it/have decent insurance and despite it's inequality, the end result is roughly that of Australia when you factor in the obesity/suicide data that I posted.

I have a hunch that if RFK can improve the underlying health of Americans, that may have better net gains than simply providing better health care access.

What you’re missing is that health costs are usually only a major factor in the senior years of life - 65 and over. For Americans it’s better to die early of treatable diseases than possibly be forced into bankruptcy seeking treatment.


I'm not drawing any conclusion, other than stating the simple life expectancy numbers need an asterisk next to them.


Check this out.

why is life expectancy low in usa than other wealthy countries


AI Overview
Learn more
Life expectancy in the United States is lower than in other countries due to a number of factors, including:

COVID-19: The top contributor to the decline in life expectancy, with three-quarters of the overall loss attributed to COVID-19 deaths

Drug overdoses: Overdose deaths have increased five-fold in the past two decades
Gun-related violence: Gun-related homicides and suicides are a major factor in the decline in life expectancy

Motor vehicle crashes: A leading cause of death in the United States

Heart disease, stroke, and diabetes: These are major causes of death in the United States

Individual behaviors: Unhealthy behaviors like smoking, poor diet, physical inactivity, and substance abuse contribute to the decline in life expectancy

Structural racism and inequities: These contribute to Americans dying younger, as evidenced by the uneven racial and ethnic breakdown in life expectancy

Poverty and access to healthcare: Americans at lower incomes die at a younger age than poor people in other rich countries
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Karnal
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #93 - Yesterday at 2:37pm
 
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:50pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:23pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:17pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Any link to that statement?.

Check the image link I posted in the previous page.

Average in Australia is 4 days. In the US it’s 21 days.

A visitation in the US typically costs around $200 without resulting in a prescription. The costs increase exponentially if purchase of drugs is required.



The same graph shows that non urgent surgery wait time in America is 28 days.
The wait time in Australia for non urgent surgery is 48 days.





Do you have a link to that, Leroy?
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Karnal
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #94 - Yesterday at 2:39pm
 
aquascoot wrote Yesterday at 2:27pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:03pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 1:52pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Australia has about 5% more life expectancy than USA.
USA has about 30% higher obesity rates.
Obesity would be the cause the difference.

Also, USA has 24% higher rate of suicide, and the average age is well below life expectancy.

So, you’re arguing that faster access to significantly lower cost of healthcare over a lifetime has no effect on life expectancy, then?




probably health care does have very little effect.
lifespan also needs to be considered alongside health span

i would imagine many if not most americans live their last 10 years with a major health issue and the hospital system is "prolonging the agony"

good nutrition, good exercise , good interpersonal relationships and good community are vital to good health and are not to be found in the western system.

the japanese eat a much better diet and are not fat .....


Several diets are conducive to the maintenance of good health and to the prevention of cardiovascular disease, for example, the Mediterranean diet, the DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension), the vegetarian diet, and the Japanese diet. We often refer to the Mediterranean Diet in these pages, because it is well established scientifically that this diet is particularly beneficial for cardiovascular health. Knowing that the Japanese have the highest life expectancy among the G7 countries, the special diet in Japan has also captured the attention of experts and an informed public in recent years.

Japanese life expectancy
Among the G7 countries, Japan has the highest life expectancy at birth according to 2016 OECD data, particularly for women. Japanese men have a slightly higher life expectancy (81.1 years) than that of Canadian men (80.9 years), while the life expectancy of Japanese women (87.1 years) is significantly higher (2.4 years) than that of Canadian women (84.7 years). The healthy life expectancy of the Japanese, 74.8 years, is also higher than in Canada (73.2 years).

The higher life expectancy of Japanese people is mainly due to fewer deaths from ischemic heart disease and cancers, particularly breast and prostate cancer. This low mortality is mainly attributable to a low rate of obesity, low consumption of red meat, and high consumption of fish and plant foods such as soybeans and tea. In Japan, the obesity rate is low (4.8% for men and 3.7% for women). By comparison, in Canada 24.6% of adult men and 26.2% of adult women were obese (BMI ≥ 30) in 2016. Obesity is an important risk factor for both ischemic heart disease and several types of cancers.



Do you have a link to that, Aquascoot?
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Gordon
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #95 - Yesterday at 2:40pm
 
aquascoot wrote Yesterday at 2:27pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:03pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 1:52pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Australia has about 5% more life expectancy than USA.
USA has about 30% higher obesity rates.
Obesity would be the cause the difference.

Also, USA has 24% higher rate of suicide, and the average age is well below life expectancy.

So, you’re arguing that faster access to significantly lower cost of healthcare over a lifetime has no effect on life expectancy, then?




probably health care does have very little effect.
lifespan also needs to be considered alongside health span

i would imagine many if not most americans live their last 10 years with a major health issue and the hospital system is "prolonging the agony"

good nutrition, good exercise , good interpersonal relationships and good community are vital to good health and are not to be found in the western system.

the japanese eat a much better diet and are not fat .....


Several diets are conducive to the maintenance of good health and to the prevention of cardiovascular disease, for example, the Mediterranean diet, the DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension), the vegetarian diet, and the Japanese diet. We often refer to the Mediterranean Diet in these pages, because it is well established scientifically that this diet is particularly beneficial for cardiovascular health. Knowing that the Japanese have the highest life expectancy among the G7 countries, the special diet in Japan has also captured the attention of experts and an informed public in recent years.

Japanese life expectancy
Among the G7 countries, Japan has the highest life expectancy at birth according to 2016 OECD data, particularly for women. Japanese men have a slightly higher life expectancy (81.1 years) than that of Canadian men (80.9 years), while the life expectancy of Japanese women (87.1 years) is significantly higher (2.4 years) than that of Canadian women (84.7 years). The healthy life expectancy of the Japanese, 74.8 years, is also higher than in Canada (73.2 years).

The higher life expectancy of Japanese people is mainly due to fewer deaths from ischemic heart disease and cancers, particularly breast and prostate cancer. This low mortality is mainly attributable to a low rate of obesity, low consumption of red meat, and high consumption of fish and plant foods such as soybeans and tea. In Japan, the obesity rate is low (4.8% for men and 3.7% for women). By comparison, in Canada 24.6% of adult men and 26.2% of adult women were obese (BMI ≥ 30) in 2016. Obesity is an important risk factor for both ischemic heart disease and several types of cancers.



Yup, having just flew back from there 2 days ago, I was amazed at the low level of fatty boombahs. In all the tourist sites, the only fatties were either western, Indian (not many) or Malaysians (lots)

On my flight back, in the row behind and next to me was a group of 6 fat Aussie tattoos slags all in their mid 30s, and all milking the flight attendants for the max amount of alcohol they could get.

I saw them all outside when I left Sydney Int terminal, they were all either vaping or smoking.
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MeisterEckhart
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #96 - Yesterday at 2:50pm
 
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 2:33pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:18pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 2:11pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:03pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 1:52pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Australia has about 5% more life expectancy than USA.
USA has about 30% higher obesity rates.
Obesity would be the cause the difference.

Also, USA has 24% higher rate of suicide, and the average age is well below life expectancy.

So, you’re arguing that faster access to significantly lower cost of healthcare over a lifetime has no effect on life expectancy, then?



I'm just posting numbers that show it's probably way more complex, like possibly that American HEALTH CARE is undoubtedly the best in the world for people who can afford it/have decent insurance and despite it's inequality, the end result is roughly that of Australia when you factor in the obesity/suicide data that I posted.

I have a hunch that if RFK can improve the underlying health of Americans, that may have better net gains than simply providing better health care access.

What you’re missing is that health costs are usually only a major factor in the senior years of life - 65 and over. For Americans it’s better to die early of treatable diseases than possibly be forced into bankruptcy seeking treatment.


I'm not drawing any conclusion, other than stating the simple life expectancy numbers need an asterisk next to them.


Check this out.

why is life expectancy low in usa than other wealthy countries


AI Overview

Structural racism and inequities: These contribute to Americans dying younger, as evidenced by the uneven racial and ethnic breakdown in life expectancy

Poverty and access to healthcare: Americans at lower incomes die at a younger age than poor people in other rich countries

Structural racism, eh…

This is why current AI should be used with caution…

Structural racism is a new socio-political idea.
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MeisterEckhart
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #97 - Yesterday at 2:53pm
 
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:50pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:23pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:17pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Any link to that statement?.

Check the image link I posted in the previous page.

Average in Australia is 4 days. In the US it’s 21 days.

A visitation in the US typically costs around $200 without resulting in a prescription. The costs increase exponentially if purchase of drugs is required.



The same graph shows that non urgent surgery wait time in America is 28 days.
The wait time in Australia for non urgent surgery is 48 days.




That’s right… if you’re rich and want, say, plastic surgery, a boob job, some other vanity surgery, or genital reassignment, wait times in the US are shorter…

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MeisterEckhart
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #98 - Yesterday at 3:44pm
 
There seems to be a confusion between availability and affordability of first-world healthcare in the US.

Of course world-class healthcare is available in the US.

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Gordon
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #99 - Yesterday at 3:53pm
 
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:53pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:50pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:23pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:17pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Any link to that statement?.

Check the image link I posted in the previous page.

Average in Australia is 4 days. In the US it’s 21 days.

A visitation in the US typically costs around $200 without resulting in a prescription. The costs increase exponentially if purchase of drugs is required.



The same graph shows that non urgent surgery wait time in America is 28 days.
The wait time in Australia for non urgent surgery is 48 days.




That’s right… if you’re rich and want, say, plastic surgery, a boob job, some other vanity surgery, or genital reassignment, wait times in the US are shorter…



Suicide, drug ODs, road deaths all at x2 of Australia. All of that alone would skew the life expectancy.

FWIW, I'm not arguing in favour of the American health care system, but you're being very simplistic by not being willing to factor in this data which clearly effects the life expectancy number.
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aquascoot
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #100 - Yesterday at 4:12pm
 
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 3:53pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:53pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:50pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:23pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:17pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Any link to that statement?.

Check the image link I posted in the previous page.

Average in Australia is 4 days. In the US it’s 21 days.

A visitation in the US typically costs around $200 without resulting in a prescription. The costs increase exponentially if purchase of drugs is required.



The same graph shows that non urgent surgery wait time in America is 28 days.
The wait time in Australia for non urgent surgery is 48 days.




That’s right… if you’re rich and want, say, plastic surgery, a boob job, some other vanity surgery, or genital reassignment, wait times in the US are shorter…



Suicide, drug ODs, road deaths all at x2 of Australia. All of that alone would skew the life expectancy.

FWIW, I'm not arguing in favour of the American health care system, but you're being very simplistic by not being willing to factor in this data which clearly effects the life expectancy number.



absolutely gordon

the current corrupt USA system , Food and Drug administration, needs a massive restructure.

the incentives are to pander to coca cola and kellogs who pay for all the research on food  Roll Eyes
and then pander to big pharma who can put all the fatties and diabetics and cardiac patients on drugs for life to treat the side effects of eating this food.

the food advice is criminal

avoid eggs Roll Eyes
dont eat meat Roll Eyes
dont eat butter Roll Eyes
dont drink milk  Roll Eyes

eat breakfast cereal and its 'fine" to have 75 % of your calories from ultra processed food Roll Eyes

you can put margarine on a plate and leave it out
nothing will eat it  Grin Grin
every animal recognises these synthetic fats as toxic.

the current recommendation from the "american peadiatric association" is that it is best practice to give ozempic or gatric banding to obese 12 yo's Cry Cry

chris williamson cited a case where a health minister was given a round of applause in congress when he announced they were building the biggest peadiatric hospital on the planet. so big, you can see it from space Shocked Shocked

no one asks "why on earth are we having to build massive hospitals for kids."
WTF are we doing ?

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greggerypeccary
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #101 - Yesterday at 4:22pm
 
aquascoot wrote Yesterday at 4:12pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 3:53pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:53pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:50pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:23pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:17pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Any link to that statement?.

Check the image link I posted in the previous page.

Average in Australia is 4 days. In the US it’s 21 days.

A visitation in the US typically costs around $200 without resulting in a prescription. The costs increase exponentially if purchase of drugs is required.



The same graph shows that non urgent surgery wait time in America is 28 days.
The wait time in Australia for non urgent surgery is 48 days.




That’s right… if you’re rich and want, say, plastic surgery, a boob job, some other vanity surgery, or genital reassignment, wait times in the US are shorter…



Suicide, drug ODs, road deaths all at x2 of Australia. All of that alone would skew the life expectancy.

FWIW, I'm not arguing in favour of the American health care system, but you're being very simplistic by not being willing to factor in this data which clearly effects the life expectancy number.



absolutely gordon

the current corrupt USA system , Food and Drug administration, needs a massive restructure.



Why didn't the rapist do that during his first term - too busy putting up 3 miles of chicken wire on the southern border?

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Leroy
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #102 - Yesterday at 4:31pm
 
Karnal wrote Yesterday at 2:37pm:
Do you have a link to that, Leroy?


Yes

here
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Every day you wake up is a good day, make the most of it.
 
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #103 - Yesterday at 4:37pm
 
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 3:44pm:
There seems to be a confusion between availability and affordability of first-world healthcare in the US.

Of course world-class healthcare is available in the US.



Yes I noticed that,  early in this thread.

US health care and research capability is amomg the best in the world; the problem is people on the median wage living paycheck to paycheck can't afford it.

Meanwhile US capitalism encourages low-income people (who don't know better) to eat lots of highly processed junk food, while greedy private-health-insurance CEOs laugh all the way to the bank. 
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« Last Edit: Yesterday at 4:47pm by thegreatdivide »  
 
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Karnal
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Re: Americas health system
Reply #104 - Yesterday at 4:43pm
 
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 2:53pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:50pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:23pm:
Leroy wrote Yesterday at 1:17pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 1:11pm:
Gordon wrote Yesterday at 12:46pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote Yesterday at 11:07am:
Average life expectancy from birth as of 2023.

Australia - 83 years - 8th in the world, behind Japan, Switzerland, South Korea, Singapore, Spain, Cyprus and Italy.

USA - 78.5 years - 40th in the world, behind nearly every 1st-world country.



Obesity rates in USA 41%, Australia 32% so that probably evens out the life expectancy.

And that the wait to see a doctor is 5 times longer in the US than in Australia… and nevermind the exponential difference in cost per visitation.


Any link to that statement?.

Check the image link I posted in the previous page.

Average in Australia is 4 days. In the US it’s 21 days.

A visitation in the US typically costs around $200 without resulting in a prescription. The costs increase exponentially if purchase of drugs is required.



The same graph shows that non urgent surgery wait time in America is 28 days.
The wait time in Australia for non urgent surgery is 48 days.




That’s right… if you’re rich and want, say, plastic surgery, a boob job, some other vanity surgery, or genital reassignment, wait times in the US are shorter…



Just so, Meister. When you put it like that, Mort's truly blessed.

Still, I'm sure RFK Jnr can get those waiting list times down a little shorter. Yes, it'll end up costing a few thou more, but the quicker the better. Mort should be able to get his man boobs whipped off in a flash.

It might take a bit longer to get the shrinks to sign off on the gender reassignment surgery, but I'm sure the Trump administration will pull out all stops.

Some of the things they can do with phalloplasty these days is incredible - especially for illegals and federal prisoners.

DEEP STATE !!!
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