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Health
Care Around the World :
The
quality of care in other developed countries is comparable with that
in the United States-patients have access to similar drugs, diagnostic
tests, and other technology for preventing, diagnosing, and treating
disease. Patients in Canada, the United Kingdom, Western Europe, and
Japan use primary care physicians for most health problems. Patients
are sent to specialists for more serious conditions, and may receive
care in hospitals and nursing homes.
The
major difference is in the way other developed countries pay for
health care. Private health insurance pays for most care in the
United States. About 90 percent of Americans have private health
insurance. Employers usually pay a portion of the premium, or cost,
as part of the benefits provided to employees besides their salaries.
Most
European countries have a national health insurance plan that provides
free care. Taxes paid by citizens pay the cost. In Canada, the central
government and the provinces share costs for medical care. Individuals
usually contribute a certain amount through payroll deductions.
The central government does not own most health care facilities
in these countries.
China
and other countries have a completely socialized health care system.
The government owns all health care facilities. Physicians and other
health care personnel are government employees. The former Soviet
Union established the world's first socialized medical system in
the 1920s. But Russia and other independent republics, formed when
the Soviet Union broke up in 1990, are experimenting with private
health insurance and other financing methods.
Billions
of people in developing countries suffer greatly because medical care
is not readily available and is poor in quality. Governments in many
poor countries in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia spend only a few dollars
per person on health care each year. Trained people, equipment, and
medicines needed to provide the most basic medical care are in grave
shortage. Families in these countries typically earn only a few hundred
dollars each year. They must rely on the government, international
aid organizations, missions, or charities for health care.
Health
care personnel and facilities are not evenly distributed among the
world's population. Wealthy industrialized countries have more physicians
and hospital beds per person than poorer developing countries. In
the mid-1990s, the United States had one physician for every 400
people and Canada one per 454 persons. In comparison, the African
country of Malawi had one physician per 45,736 people; Nigeria had
one per 5,207 people; and India had one physician per 2,459 people.
Hospital facilities are also distributed unequally. The United States
has one hospital bed for every 244 people compared with one per
196 in Canada; one per 949 in Honduras; one per 1,252 in Haiti;
and one per 1,270 in India. Major imbalances in the amount of money
spent on health care also exist. The poorest developing countries
spent less than $10 per person per year on health, compared to several
thousand per person in developed countries.
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