1 billion individuals cannot pay for basic health care

The World Health Organization confirms a most horrifying trend in their recent study: 1 billion individuals cannot pay for paid medical care of any kind. Reuters reports the issue is even more complicated than that, however. Each year, the high cost of health care takes 100 million paying customers into the arms of poverty. Post resource - One billion people cannot afford health care, says WHO by Personal Money Store.

Nations that cannot afford medical care must increase efficiency

The WHO's worldwide report on health care pays particular attention to financing, as the number of nations with large numbers of individuals who cannot afford medical care has growth considerably. Taxes and fund-raising measures are used in order to make sure that more people are able to afford medical care. With universal coverage as the ultimate goal, this is very important.

Individuals have to choose whether to actually get health insurance because of the state of medical care worldwide right now based on Who’s director of health systems financing, David Evans.

“When (health services) are not affordable, it means you either choose not really to use them or you suffer severe financial hardship,” he said.

Purpose of World Health Organization to improve worldwide health care

The World Health Organization suggests that 15 to 20 percent of medical care spending comes out of pocket for a country’s total health spending which is how those who do pay for medical care will not stop. You will find 33 low-to middle-income countries right now that pay way too much in out of pocket payments. More than 50 percent is paid for them. The amount spent should, in theory, drop substantially if the governments diversified their revenue sources. Some suggestions in the report were sin, taxes, currency transaction taxes and wealth taxes.

Medical care being rarely used

Compounding the problem of 1 billion individuals who can't pay for medical care is health care waste. Really expensive drugs and treatments that are unnecessary are where a ton of cash goes in global health care spending. In fact, World Health Organization director general Margaret Chan states 20 to 40 percent goes to this. This inefficiency comes from hardly any correct medical training also. Add on the belief that some countries pay as much as 67 times more than the international average for some medicines, and it becomes apparent that the health care dilemma isn't one that could be solved quickly.

"There is no magic bullet to achieving universal access,” said Chan. “Nevertheless, a wide range of experiences from worldwide suggests that countries can move forward faster."

Information from

Reuters

reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6AL1GV20101122

The need for health care reform in India

youtube.com/watch?v=dPsX46Svjmo

 

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thechampaignlife wrote on November 26, 2010 at 9:11 am

I don't know much about the

I don't know much about the international health scene but I think a single payer system is the way to go in the US for a baseline level of care and private insurance can be purchased for higher quality care when desired.