Good that you admit that there's no justification for striving for profit in the healthcare sector, then.But that's not what I am arguing.
Good that you admit that there's no justification for striving for profit in the healthcare sector, then.But that's not what I am arguing.
Good that you admit that there's no justification for striving for profit in the healthcare sector, then.
Because the existence of for profit healthcare does not stops the existence of the supposedly more efficient public healthcare. Many (most?) countries have both. So the moral case here is non-existing.
It benefits everyone in the long run, the rich more in the short run. My dad benefited from techniques and drugs developed in the US while undergoing an operation in Brazil. The doctor responsible for his procedure had nearly daily exchanges with american institutions. Anyone who denies the fantastic innovation of American healthcare is completely ignorant on the subject.
This is just not as true as people think. The US is a dynamo of medical research, but many of the Western European countries (incl. UK), Japan, Korea, Canada, etc. are really comparable.There's public funding, yes, but pharmaceutical companies are private giants by and large market funded. You might ask yourself why most medical innovation comes from the US and not any other country.
I think you are underestimating the extent of the lead of the US in medical innovation. Of course, the fact they are big and rich is part of the explanation (and as you correctly put it, they are only so rich because of their market-based system). But look at this:This is just not as true as people think. The US is a dynamo of medical research, but many of the Western European countries (incl. UK), Japan, Korea, Canada, etc. are really comparable.
The US has a strict advantage over many countries just due to population. Being 10x bigger than Canada, it's no surprise that they have more innovation. If you were to compare the innovation to the %GDP spent on 'healthcare', then US would do very poorly. If you look at the innovation rate compared to total GDP, it's pretty good. But so are many other developed countries.
The US tends to score better, and part of that is due to being wealthier. And part of that wealth is likely due to their market system.
This is something I'm terribly interested in, and it's actually really hard to unpack. If there is a research benefit due to high healthcare costs, it's actually hard to say that the people are getting much of a premium on that extra cost.
The top five U.S. hospitals conduct more clinical trials than all the hospitals in any other single developed country.[14] Since the mid-1970s, the Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology has gone to American residents more often than recipients from all other countries combined.[15] In only five of the past 34 years did a scientist living in America not win or share in the prize. Most important recent medical innovations were developed in the United States.[16] [See the table.]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_in_the_United_StatesIn 2003, research and development expenditures were approximately $95 billion with $40 billion coming from public sources and $55 billion coming from private sources.[22][23] These investments into medical research have made the United States the leader in medical innovation, measured either in terms of revenue or the number of new drugs and devices introduced.[24][25] In 2006, the United States accounted for three quarters of the world’s biotechnology revenues and 82% of world R&D spending in biotechnology.[24][25] According to multiple international pharmaceutical trade groups, the high cost of patented drugs in the U.S. has encouraged substantial reinvestment in such research and development.[24][25][26]
I don't see how the existence of for-profit hospitals prevents the emergence of non-profits or public hospitals. The reverse would be more logical.
If there's only one hospital in the area and it happens to be a for-profit, that seems to prove the point that they serve a good purpose. If it were not for that hospital there would be no hospital in said region. And if there's plenty of demand in the region, nothing is stopping the emergence of a public or non-profit additional hospital.
I think you and I see things precisely opposite
I would think (but I don't know!) that the existence of a for-profit institution would have exert a downwards pressure on wages and services relative to the non-profit. Plus, hospitals are the sorts of things where excess capacity is a drag on the operating costs - something a for-profit entity would strive to eliminate. The result is that you get the bare minimum of service for the community's needs. The way it is here they try to kick you out the door as fast as possible so they can free up a bed for the next person.
But again - I don't know if this is really how things work. I'm looking into it.
The problem in my neck of the woods is free riding. The public hospitals are subsidized by county level tax dollars. The most affluent county in the region free rides by referring its poor to Dallas county instead of providing an in-county alternative for its poor.OTOH, if a private hospital is so expensive as to exclude a sizeable proportion of the population, there will be demand for lower cost alternatives, so people choosing the location of a nonprofit or public hospital will still consider the region, as the private hospital is not meeting all demand.
I think you are underestimating the extent of the lead of the US in medical innovation. Of course, the fact they are big and rich is part of the explanation (and as you correctly put it, they are only so rich because of their market-based system). But look at this:
Spoiler :![]()
http://www.ncpa.org/pub/ba649
and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_in_the_United_States
While that's a valid (and very real) concern, that's actually a problem of implementation of public healthcare, not of private hospitals.The problem in my neck of the woods is free riding. The public hospitals are subsidized by county level tax dollars. The most affluent county in the region free rides by referring its poor to Dallas county instead of providing an in-county alternative for its poor.
The US is huge, but in terms of innovation in medical industry they represent 70% - 85% of the global total, depending on the metric. They're not that huge in GDP or healthcare spending, which does mean that their system is stimulating innovation more than others, as flawed as it may be in other departments.Like I said, the US is a juggernaut. That list you gave is weird, though. SSRIs were discovered in Sweden. The ACE inhibitors weren't discovered in Sweden, but I am quite sure they were Western Europe (I want to say UK, but I was reading about UK drug discoveries eariler today)