找出奇怪的人
Spot The Odd One Out

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/spot-odd-one-out

在这篇文章中,它讨论了美国如何因 COVID-19 大流行而经历了预期寿命的重大损失,从而抵消了近二十年来的预期寿命增长。 尽管美国人的人均医疗保健支出位居全球最高,但美国人的预期寿命仍然低于其他主要发达国家。 Visual Capitalist 提供的图表将美国的医疗保健支出和预期寿命与各个富裕国家进行了比较。 Peterson-KFF 收集的数据显示,截至 2022 年,美国在富裕大国中的预期寿命最短,而其人均医疗保健费用超过 12,500 美元。值得注意的是,美国在医疗保健方面的支出比该研究中的任何其他国家都多,每年超过德国 4,600 美元。 美国的预期寿命比德国落后三年半左右。 平均而言,所分析的 12 个发达国家报告的每人医疗保健费用约为 6,700 美元,预期寿命为 82.2 岁。 美国人的支出几乎是原来的两倍,而平均寿命却减少了五年。 尽管医疗保健支出和预期寿命都会受到众多社会和经济因素的影响,但1980年,美国在医疗保健支出和预期寿命方面与同时代人相似,但此后趋势发生了偏离。 英国和日本等国家的例子截然不同; 英国通过国民医疗服务将成本保持在相对较低的水平,而日本则拥有较高的预期寿命(约 84 岁),尽管医疗费用约为 5,300 美元。 日本人的长寿可能部分归因于饮食中红肉摄入量的减少和海鲜摄入量的增加。

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原文

The COVID-19 pandemic erased nearly two decades of life expectancy gains in America. Meanwhile, U.S. health spending per capita is at the highest level in the world.

In the graphic below, Visual Capitalist's Marcus Lu visualizes life expectancy and per capita healthcare costs across several wealthy nations.

Figures were compiled by Peterson-KFF, and are as of 2022.

As Peterson–KFF bluntly notes, “the U.S. has the lowest life expectancy amongst large, wealthy countries” while their per capita healthcare cost has moved past $12,500 as of 2022

In fact the U.S. is an outlier for both healthcare costs (+$4,600 from next-highest Germany), and in life expectancy (-3.2 years from Germany).

Note: Health spend is measured in PPP-adjusted 2022 U.S. dollars.

From the 12 developed countries in the analysis, the average healthcare per capita cost is at $6,700 with a life expectancy of 82.2 years. Americans spend nearly double the amount while living 5 years less on average. Peterson-KFF also notes that in 1980, the U.S. had similar health spends and life expectancies as all its peers. Trends have since diverged.

Of course, both health care spending and life expectancies are influenced by a variety of socioeconomic factors. For example, the UK has the lowest costs ($5,500) amongst its European peers in the group, thanks in part to its National Health Service.

At the same time, Japan has one of the highest life expectancies in the world (84 years) while its per capita health costs come in at $5,300. Their low red meat intake and high fish consumption are partially credited with maintaining good health in the population.

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