ON OCTOBER 4TH more than 75,000 employees of Kaiser Permanente, a large health-care chain, began a three-day strike. The walkout was the biggest in the history of America’s health sector, and called attention to the staffing shortages plaguing the country’s hospitals and clinics. In the same week ten drugmakerssaid they wouldnegotiate medicine prices with Medicare, the public health-care system for the elderly, following legislation which all but forced them to.It will be the first time that companies have haggled over prices with the government.
These events are symptoms of deeper malaise in America’s dysfunctional health-care system. The country spends about $4.3trn a year on keeping citizens in good nick. That is equivalent to 17% of GDP, twice as much as the average in other rich economies. And yet American adults live shorter lives and American infants die more often than in similarly affluent places. Pharmaceutical firms and hospitals attract much of the public ire for the inflated costs. Much less attention is paid to a small number of middlemen who extract far bigger rents from the system’s complexity.
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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Really big health”
Chart sources: American Medical Association; Drug Channels; Irving Levin Associates; Refinitiv Datastream; Health Affairs; The Economist
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From the October 14th 2023 edition
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