Who benefits from the American healthcare system

Patients in the United States pay about $5,000 per person on healthcare but are not healthier than people in other countries. In article by The Economist, authors examined exactly where the money goes, and which firms profit the most.

While one explanation to high costs is waste, like patients being prescribed excessive amount of medications, the cost of unnecessary services also pays a role in increased costs. This excess spending is most controversial in rent-seeking by healthcare firms.

Rent-seeking by healthcare is explained as “when companies extract outsize profits relative to the capital they deploy and risks they take.” While these costs do not account for the majority of the healthcare costs in the U.S., they are excessive as healthcare firms make more than $65 billion in profits per year.

Read the full story below:

""
Cara Livernois, News Writer

Cara joined TriMed Media in 2016 and is currently a Senior Writer for Clinical Innovation & Technology. Originating from Detroit, Michigan, she holds a Bachelors in Health Communications from Grand Valley State University.

Around the web

Given the precarious excitement of the moment—or is it exciting precarity?—policymakers and healthcare leaders must set directives guiding not only what to do with AI but also when to do it. 

The final list also included diabetes drugs sold by Boehringer Ingelheim and Merck. The first round of drug price negotiations reduced the Medicare prices for 10 popular drugs by up to 79%. 

HHS has thought through the ways AI can and should become an integral part of healthcare, human services and public health. Last Friday—possibly just days ahead of seating a new secretary—the agency released a detailed plan for getting there from here.