Victor César Herrera Cortés
139324
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/24/business/accountable-care-helping-hospitals-keep-medical-costs-down.html?ref=health
139324
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/24/business/accountable-care-helping-hospitals-keep-medical-costs-down.html?ref=health
The article I’ve found in the internet is from the New York Times and it is about the health care situation in the United States. And it is title is “A Health Provider strives to keep beds empty” and I’ll connected with the team in the book about the health care situation in the U.S.
The conception of the health system in the states Is that the to provide effective and qualified health attention is directly proportional to the quantity and quality of the insurance the patient has contracted before.
The article talks about that certain liberties has been made by insurance companies in order to low costs and increase their income accounts. The plan is quite simple, to have a better and more efficient control about the scores of patients entering and exit the hospital , the situation is that the hospitals can now in some places in Chicago the liberty and scrutiny of preventing or either vetting the entrance of some patients having in consideration the gravity of their cases in particular.
For the U.S. current health scores, the higher and most frequent and also expensive health problems that the insurance sector has to solve are diabetes and morbid obese. Therefore for those people in such cases need to stand with insurance in order to receive proper healthcare.
For the U.S. the culture of prevention in health issues is sincerely not a matter of business, just because the private sector manages the 100% of the services. Nevertheless thousands of American citizens receive at higher costs what in right need to receive.
In the first instance the government policy was that the simple capitalist competence will make lower costs and more profitable for costumers / patients, but the prevention skills to prevent America’s worst health problem don not come into effect like the obese problems in the majority of the population.
The state has becoming in the U.S. an absence individual that do not make the effort to ensure or either pressure companies to comply their responsibilities in such health problems and letting the Americans for their own on such issues.
IN CONCLUSION
The health services in the United States are on the mercy of those who take the main choices, and those are insurance companies, the private sector in particular; that do not really have the interest to prevent Americans of such diseases that can be controlled in the better way in the conscience of patients. The health sector has becoming one of thousands of business in the U.S. that functions in the costs of people and their benefit. Poor people in the U.S. are more in the mercy of those who control the system and regulate the services.
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