Cost
of Medical Care
The
United States spends more on health care than any other
country in the world. Spending in 1998 averaged $4,094
per person, compared to $2,689 in 1990, $1,052 in 1980,
$341 in 1970, and $141 in 1960. The only countries that
approached the United States in per capita spending
were Switzerland ($2,412), Germany ($2,222), Luxembourg
($2,206), and Canada ($2,002). In the United States,
spending on health care exceeded $1.1 trillion in 1998,
up from $699.4 billion in 1990, $247.3 in 1980, $73.2
in 1970, and $26.9 billion in 1960.
Yet
millions of Americans still do not have adequate access
to health care because they lack insurance coverage.
An estimated 44.2 million people had no health insurance
in 1998. Access is a greater problem in the United States
because most other industrialized countries have national
health insurance systems that cover medical expenses.
Since the 1960s, the United States Congress established
and expanded programs to improve access to care. Medicare,
the major program, covered about 38 million people over
age 65 and people with disabilities in 1997. Another
was Medicaid, a federal-state program that covers low-income
people. During the 1990s, Congress considered and rejected
proposals to establish a national health insurance system
or extend government health care benefits to more people.
The high costs of such a program were among the reasons
for rejection.
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