This is so obvious that San Francisco ought to be signing on right away (and pushing the speaker of the house to make is happen).
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This is so obvious that San Francisco ought to be signing on right away (and pushing the speaker of the house to make is happen).
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del.icio.us •
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google
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Comments (2)
Then there's this:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7511426.stm
US slips down development index
Americans live shorter lives than citizens of almost every other developed nation, according to a report from several US charities.
The report found that the US ranked 42nd in the world for life expectancy despite spending more on health care per person than any other country.
Overall, the American Human Development Report ranked the world's richest country 12th for human development.
The study looked at US government data on health, education and income.
The report was funded by Oxfam America, the Rockefeller Foundation and the Conrad Hilton Foundation.
The report combines measurements of health, education and income into one measurement - the human development index - based on that used by the United Nations.
Health insurance
The report, Measure of America, identifies significant progress in the US in the last 50 years.
Life expectancy - which averages 78 - has risen eight years since 1960.
"Some Americans are living anywhere from 30 to 50 years behind others when it comes to issues we all care about: health, education and standard of living
Sarah Burd-Sharps Author, Measure of America"
Japan has the world's highest life expectancy - 82.1 years - according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
The US report identifies obesity and the lack of health insurance for some 47 million Americans as the most significant factors in premature death.
It also provides a snapshot of the inequalities between the richest and the poorest Americans and between different ethnic groups.
"The Measure of America reveals huge gaps among some groups in our country to access opportunity and reach their potential," said the report's author, Sarah Burd-Sharps.
"Some Americans are living anywhere from 30 to 50 years behind others when it comes to issues we all care about: health, education and standard of living.
"For example, the state human development index shows that people in last-ranked Mississippi are living 30 years behind those in first-ranked Connecticut."
Rich north-east
Asian males in the US were found to have the highest human development index score and were expected to live 14 years longer than African-American males, who had the lowest human development index rating.
African-Americans had a shorter lifespan than the average American did in the late 1970s.
The report further breaks down its findings into the US's 436 Congressional districts.
The 20th district, around Fresno, California, was ranked last - with people earning one-third as much as residents of the top-ranked US district,- in Manhattan, New York.
The US north-east has the highest overall ranking because people there earn more, are more highly-educated and have the second highest life expectancy.
West Virginia, Louisiana, Arkansas and Alabama are four of the five bottom states on the index. Mississippi is ranked lowest.
Among other findings:
* Of the world's richest nations, the US has the most children (15%) living in poverty
* Of the OECD nations, the US has the most people in prison - as a percentage and in absolute numbers
* 25% of 15-year-old students performed at or below the lowest level in an international maths test - worse than Canada, France, Germany and Japan
* If the US infant mortality rate were equal to first-ranked Sweden, more than 20,000 babies would survive beyond their first year of life
Posted by marc salomon | July 18, 2008 09:12 AM
A lack of insurance and high health care costs are forcing many Americans to miss out on preventive care: people are skipping check-ups, discontinuing medication, even refusing annual screenings like mammograms and colonoscopies.
I heard a story of a man who had quit smoking in order to afford gas for his 40-mile commute to work. Unfortunately, he still developed pneumonia. The patient refused to let an ER doctor admit him, in fear of the costs, and he decided not to fill an antibiotic prescription, because his insurance had a $50 drug co-pay, which he said he simply couldn't afford.
You probably know what happened next. The man's condition deteriorated and he was forced to be admitted into the ICU of a large medical center, where he underwent tens of thousands of dollars of treatment.
Bottom line: Just as we might have suspected, the tough economy is forcing many Americans to skip basic health care. The irony, of course, is that, despite all the conservative babble about choice and competition, a system that ensures preventative care for all Americans would save money overall and strengthen our economy.
In order to get there, though, we need to reprioritize how our tax dollars are being spent. Last year, the average American paid $235 in tax dollars for the war in Iraq. This amount paid for a fraction of a second of the war; the same amount of money could pay for 25 days of health coverage. More investment in health care costs could mean the difference between catching a condition early and nipping it in the bud or paying for expensive emergency procedures once that condition worsens.
To find out how much of your money went to fund the war instead of fundamental needs like health care, education and renewable energy, Progressive Future has built the Invest In US Calculator. Just enter your 2007 income before taxes, and you'll see how much of your tax dollars went to the war, how many fractions of a second of war that money bought, and what that money could have been used for instead.
If you are disgusted with the results, I would ask that you also sign the petition posted on that page.
Progressive Future is taking advantage of our strong roots in Denver, and working hard to get affordable health care for all Americans on the Democratic Party platform, as well as send a strong message to Congress and the media about where the priorities of the American people stand. We are gathering hundreds of signatures, which we will use to take our health care plea to the streets.
Posted by Kate Drazner | July 29, 2008 02:21 PM