Unless you’ve been living under a rock you have probably seen television shows where doctors revived a patient whose heart had stopped. If you’re old enough, you probably even know people who have suffered a sudden cardiac arrest. My grandfather had one, but I know of numerous others. Something they all have in common is they’re all dead. About 85 to 90 percent of people who suffer a sudden cardiac arrest do not survive, because they don’t get help in time.
Category: Public Insurance
Why Is American Life Expectancy Tanking? It’s the Early Death of the Young
Americans are now dying younger on average than they used to, breaking from all global and historical patterns of predictable improvement. They are dying younger than in any peer countries, even accounting for the larger impact of the pandemic here. They are dying younger than in China, Cuba, the Czech Republic or Lebanon….
Update on the British NHS
All is not well:
- The waiting list for hospital-based procedures stands at 7.2 million—about 12 percent of the population
- In mid-2022, 42.7 percent of all patients were forced to wait more than four hours before they received any care.
- Compared to 2019, outpatient appointments are down 13.8 percent.
- Official measures of mortality indicate that the NHS’s shortcomings are contributing to higher-than-normal death rates, with perhaps as many as 500 “excess” deaths occurring every week.
It Is Legal to Layoff Workers on Medical, Maternity and Family Leave
By now everyone should know there are both state and federal laws banning discrimination against certain classes of employees. For example, a tech firm was recently accused of posting a job notice seeking white candidates only. After an embarrassing backlash the posting was taken down. The firm later apologized and said the job was posted by a junior recruiter. The apology was later edited to say it was posted by an ex-recruiter. I don’t know whether the recruiter was an ex-recruiter before or after the discriminatory post. It could be either.