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The U.S. may be one of the wealthiest countries in the world, but it certainly isn't the healthiest, according to a new report from the National Research Council and the Institute of Medicine.
The report, released today, compared the U.S. with 16 other high-income democracies, including Australia, Canada, Japan, and many western European countries. It found, on average, that
Americans die sooner and experience higher rates of disease and injury than people in other countries. The report is the first look at multiple diseases, injuries and behaviors across the entire human life span.
"Americans are dying and suffering at rates that we know are unnecessary because people in other high-income countries are living longer lives and enjoying better health," said Steven H. Woolf, professor of family medicine at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond and chair of the panel that wrote the report. "What concerns our panel is why, for decades, we have been slipping behind."
The panel also found that health problems exist among Americans regardless of age and that even Americans with certain advantages, such as higher incomes, a college education and health insurance, are sicker than people in other rich nations.
Some of the key areas of health in which the U.S. fared poorly included
infant mortality and low birth weight, injuries and homicides, teen pregnancies, sexually transmitted diseases,
obesity,
diabetes and heart disease.
Many of these health conditions disproportionately affect children and adolescents, the report found. For decades, the U.S. has had the highest infant mortality rate of any high-income country, and it also ranks poorly in measures of
premature birth rates and the proportion of children who live until age 5.
According to the report, American teens have higher rates of death from car accidents and homicide and the highest rates of
teen pregnancy. What's more, they are more likely to acquire
sexually transmitted infections than their counterparts in other high-income countries.
The findings build on a 2011 National Research Council report that showed a growing mortality gap among Americans over age 50.
"It's a tragedy," Woolf said. "Our report found that an equally large, if not larger, disadvantage exists among younger Americans. I don't think most parents know that, on average, infants, children, and adolescents in the U.S. die younger and have greater rates of illness and injury than youth in other countries."
But some experts, including Dr. Marc Roberts, who specializes in political economy and global health at Harvard University School of Public Health, said the report's findings were "old news."
"Everyone who studies variations in national health systems has known this for decades," he said.
He also said the report's findings were superficial. "The report doesn't dig deeper into why many of these countries do better than the U.S.," he said. "Some of these countries have equal
health care access while the U.S. doesn't. Limited access to health care is a major problem."
Reasons for America's low health outcomes include higher levels of poverty and income inequality,
poor eating habits, higher rates of drug abuse, more car accidents that involve alcohol and easy access to firearms.
The panel did find that the U.S. outperforms other countries in some areas of health and health-related behavior. For example, Americans over age 75 live longer than their peers in other high-income countries. Americans also have lower death rates from stroke and cancer, better control of blood pressure and cholesterol levels, and lower rates of smoking.
Although the panel acknowledged that strategies are already in place to address low-performing health measures, they recommend that health officials inform the American public about the country's health disadvantages and be proactive.
"Research is important, but we should not wait for more data before taking action, because we already know what to do," Woolf said. "If we fail to act, the disadvantage will continue to worsen and our children will face shorter lives and greater rates of illness than their peers in other rich nations."
Obesity, diabetes and CV disease are trans-fat diseases. They are caused deliberately by the psychos in big pharma and the medical establishment. The mechanisms are largely understood with literally thousands of papers in the peer reviewed scientific literature. For example:
Obesity is caused by "glucose transport" reduction due to the poisoning of cell walls at insulin receptor sites by trans-fatty acids. The abnormal unnatural electronic distribution of charges in the TFAs causes cross linkage hydrogen bonding between adjacent areas of the cell walls so that pores that are meant to open and admit glucose into the cell under the influence of an insulin receptor stimulated by the hormone insulin do not open or only partially open thus slowing down the uptake of glucose. Further reductions to glucose transport occur at mitochondrial cell walls poisoned by TFAs. With less glucose available to produce ATP in the mitochondria we get less ATP and a general slowing of metabolism. The symptom of this poisoning is called the Metabolic Syndrome, it exists in a continuum of severities.
Obesity is very easy to cure and it is rarely anything to do with eating less or exercising more. It takes a couple of years but there is no effort involved and nothing expensive to buy.
Hey! But who wants to know this. Go and plug yourselves back into the Matrix and be deceived by the Suppressors Of The Truth.