Why Our Healthcare System Isn't Healthy

Written by Deb Bromley


Most people are well aware that an estimated 45 million Americans currently do not have healthcare, but isrepparttar crisis simplyrepparttar 134977 lack of health insurance or evenrepparttar 134978 cost of health insurance? Is there a bigger underlying problem atrepparttar 134979 root of our healthcare system? Althoughrepparttar 134980 U.S. claims to haverepparttar 134981 most advanced medicine inrepparttar 134982 world, government health statistics and peer-reviewed journals demonstrate that allopathic medicine often causes more harm than good.

People in general have always felt they could trust doctors andrepparttar 134983 medical profession, but according torepparttar 134984 Journal ofrepparttar 134985 American Medical Association in July 2000, iatrogenic death, also known as death from physician error or death from medical treatment, wasrepparttar 134986 third leading cause of death in America and rising, responsible for at least 250,000 deaths per year. Those statistics are considered conservative by many, asrepparttar 134987 reported numbers only include in-hospital deaths, not injury or disability, and do not include external iatrogenic deaths such as those resulting from nursing home and other private facility treatments, and adverse effects of prescriptions. One recent study estimatedrepparttar 134988 total unnecessary deaths from iatrogenic causes at approximately 800,000 per year at a cost of $282 billion per year, which would make death from American medicinerepparttar 134989 leading cause of death in our country. Currently, at least 2 out of 3 Americans use medications, 32 million Americans are taking three or more medications daily, and commercials and advertisements for pharmaceutical drugs have saturatedrepparttar 134990 marketplace. Although our population is aging, exorbitantly expensive drugs are being marketed and dispensed to younger and younger patients, including many children who years ago would never have been given or needed medication, for everything from ADHD to asthma to bipolar disease and diabetes. Clearly,repparttar 134991 state of health in this country is not improving even though there are an increasing number of medications and treatments. Between 2003 and 2010,repparttar 134992 number of prescriptions are expected to increase substantially by 47%. In recent years, numerous drugs previously deemed safe byrepparttar 134993 FDA have been recalled because of their toxicity, afterrepparttar 134994 original drug approvals were actually funded byrepparttar 134995 invested pharmaceutical companies themselves.

According torepparttar 134996 media, thanks to advances in U.S. drugs and medical procedures, Americans are living longer statistically, but they are living longer sicker, with a lower quality of life, and often dependent on multiple expensive synthetic medications that do not cure or addressrepparttar 134997 underlying causes, but only suppress symptoms, often with a plethora of dangerous side effects torepparttar 134998 tune of billions of dollars forrepparttar 134999 drug industry. Considering thatrepparttar 135000 U.S. is supposed to haverepparttar 135001 most advanced technology inrepparttar 135002 world andrepparttar 135003 best health care system, it is at odds that we spendrepparttar 135004 most on healthcare, yet arerepparttar 135005 most obese and most afflicted with illness outside ofrepparttar 135006 AIDS epidemic in some third world countries.

Unless you have an acute emergency that requires emergency room care, being admitted to a hospital environment may be more dangerous to your health than staying out. In 2003, epidemiologists reported inrepparttar 135007 New England Journal of Medicine that hospital-acquired infections have risen steadily in recent decades, with blood and tissue infections known as sepsis almost tripling from 1979 to 2000. Nearly two million patients inrepparttar 135008 U.S. get an infection while inrepparttar 135009 hospital each year, and of those patients over 90,000 die per year, up dramatically from just 13,300 in 1992. Statistics show that approximately 56% ofrepparttar 135010 population has been unnecessarily treated, or mistreated, byrepparttar 135011 medical industry.

The New Food Pyramid: Another Attempt At Providing Easy Answers

Written by Dave Saunders


The Food Pyramid, first introduced torepparttar US in 1992, just experienced a major overhaul. Why? Perhaps proper education about nutrition isn't as easy as picking out food from a colorful chart. Last month, The New England Journal of Medicine reported that childhood obesity was causing a retreat in average lifespan. That report seems to only cover part ofrepparttar 134971 picture as chronic disease, such as cardiac dysfunction and Type II Diabetes have been on a steady rise in recent years. Because many people seem to be unwilling to learn how to make better lifestyle choices, it is onlyrepparttar 134972 toxic pharmaceutical drugs that seem to be extendingrepparttar 134973 lives of these people.

Agriculture secretary Mike Johanns describedrepparttar 134974 old food pyramid as being "quite familiar" to most Americans, "but few Americans followrepparttar 134975 recommendations." The solution, found at www.mypyramid.gov, is apparently more colors and to makerepparttar 134976 bands travel downwards instead of horizontally. Yes, that counts as a solution where french fries and catsup count as two servings of vegetables inrepparttar 134977 school lunch program.

Well, some progress is better than no progress. On a positive note,repparttar 134978 new dietary guidelines do recommend daily physical activity. If even a few people get out of their chairs because their government tells them too, these changes, andrepparttar 134979 expense ofrepparttar 134980 marketing for all of this will be well-worth our tax dollars.

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