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Why Our Healthcare System Isn't Healthy Submitted By: Deb Bromley
Most people are well aware that an estimated 45 million Americans
currently do not have healthcare, but is the crisis simply the lack
of health insurance or even the cost of health insurance? Is there
a bigger underlying problem at the root of our healthcare system?
Although the U.S. claims to have the most advanced medicine in the
world, government health statistics
peer-reviewed journals are painting a different picture -- that allopathic
medicine often causes more harm than good. People in general have
always felt they could trust doctors and the medical profession, but
according to the Journal of the American Medical Association in July
2000, iatrogenic death, also known as death from physician error or
death from medical treatment, was the third leading cause of death
in America and rising, responsible for at least 250,000 deaths per
year. Those statistics are considered conservative by many,
as the reported numbers only include in-hospital deaths, not injury
or disability, and do not include external iatrogenic deaths such
as those resulting from nursing home and other private facility
treatments, and adverse effects of prescriptions. One recent study
estimated the total unnecessary deaths from iatrogenic causes at
approximately 800,000 per year at a cost of $282 billion per year,
which would make death from American medicine the leading cause
of death in our country.Currently, at least 2 out of 3 Americans
use medications, 32 million Americans are taking three or more medications
daily, and commercials and advertisements for pharmaceutical drugs
have saturated the marketplace.
Although our population is aging, exorbitantly expensive drugs
are being marketed and dispensed to younger and younger patients,
including many children who years ago would never have been given
or needed medication, for everything from ADHD to asthma to bipolar
disease and diabetes. Clearly, the state of health in this country
is not improving even though there are an increasing number of medications
and treatments. Between 2003 and 2010, the number of prescriptions
are expected to increase substantially by 47%. In recent years,
numerous drugs previously deemed safe by the FDA have been recalled
because of their toxicity, after the original drug approvals were
actually funded by the invested pharmaceutical companies themselves.
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