A study published in the journal Health Affairs , shows that personal healthcare spending in the US reached $US2.2 trillion in 2010, equivalent to $7097 per person. Other findings of the study were: Females accounted for 56% of spending, at $7860 per person, which is 25% per capita ...
This study used data from National Health Expenditure Accounts to estimate US spending on personal health care and public health, according to condition,
Total spending on health care in the United States grew by 7.9% in 2004 and now accounts for 16% of the gross domestic product, says the National Health Statistics Group of the US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Total health spending in the US in 2004 was $6280 (3520; €...
Spending on health care in the United States rose to $2.5 trillion (1.6 trillion; €1.8 trillion) in 2009, experts at the government's Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services have estimated. That is a rise of 5.7% over the amount spent in 2008. Spending on health care in the US now...
The report mentions that spending on health care in the U.S. grew more slowly in 2005 than in any year since 1999, however spending still grew at twice the rate of inflation and faster than raises in wages. The reason given for the slowdown in growth was diminished spending on drugs. ...
Objective To estimate US spending on health care according to 3 types of payers (public insurance [including Medicare, Medicaid, and other government programs], private insurance, or out-of-pocket payments) and by health condition, age group, sex, and type of care for 1996 through 2016. Desig...
(Medical Xpress)—Health care spending is much higher for older Americans than for younger adults and children, on average, and analysts have said that increasing spending leads to longer life expectancy. But new research from the University of Michigan indicates that aging populations could view th...
"These findings offer insight into why the US spends so much onhealthcare," said Dr. Jay Want, executive director of the Peterson Center on Healthcare, which funded the study. "Increasedhealth carespending is driven more by how care is priced and delivered to patients than by the population...
1Studies Show US Spending Doesn’t Get Best Health The United States may spend twice as much on health care as other rich countries but it is not getting results to match, according to studies released on Tuesday. But in the study of five wealthy countries, published in the journal Health...
Spending on health in the US is projected to reach almost 20% of GDP by 2022. American spending on health is projected to grow to 19.9% of the economy in 2022, compared with 17.9% in 2011, the latest analysis by actuaries at the Cent... Roehr,B - Bmj 被引量: 2发表: 2013年 ...