Commonwealth Fund July, 2017
Eric C. Schneider, Dana O. Sarnak, David Squires, Arnav Shah, and Michelle M. Doty

The United States Health System Falls Short

The United States spends far more on health care than other high-income countries, with spending levels that rose continuously over the past three decades (Exhibit 1). Yet the U.S. population has poorer health than other countries. 1 Life expectancy, after improving for several decades, worsened in recent years for some populations, aggravated by the opioid crisis. 2 In addition, as the baby boom population ages, more people in the U.S.—and all over the world—are living with age-related disabilities and chronic disease, placing pressure on health care systems to respond.

Timely and accessible health care could mitigate many of these challenges, but the U.S. health care system falls short, failing to deliver indicated services...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: ACA (Affordable Care Act), CMS, Congress / White House, Health System / Hospital, Healthcare System, HHS, Market Research, Medicaid, Medicare, Medicare Advantage, Patient / Consumer, Payer, Physician, Primary care, Provider
Medicaid spending ranked by share of state budgets
Where hospitals, health systems fall short in ASC joint ventures
Who Wins If The New Biden AI Export Rules Stand?
Federal Policy Debates in 2025 Carry High Stakes
AI's role in stroke care at Orlando Health, 2 years in

Share This Article