Summary

A new American Medical Association study shows that Americans live with diseases for an average of 12.4 years, up from 10.9 years in 2000, marking a 29% higher gap than the global average.

Mental health, substance-use disorders, and musculoskeletal diseases are key contributors.

Women in the U.S. have a larger healthspan-lifespan gap than men, with 13.7 years spent sick compared to 11.1 years for men.

The study reflects a global trend of people living longer but spending more years burdened by disease, with the U.S. leading other high-income nations in this gap.

  • snooggums@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    We pay twice as much per capita to provide coverage to less than 100% of the population for worse outcomes and are currently killing women for having complications during pregnancy.

    Clearly a world leader in doing everything wrong.

      • snooggums@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        Profits, executive pay, and massive amounts of redundant overhead that exists to squeeze out more profit. Hell, they spend a ton of money on denying claims.

        All the negotiations between each medical provider and each insurer costs money.

        Not going to healthcare.