The graph shows the U.S. death rate
for infectious diseases between 1900 and 1996. The line starts all the way at
the top. In 1900, 800 of every 100,000 Americans died from infectious diseases.
The top killers were pneumonia, tuberculosis and diarrhea. But the line quickly
begins falling. By 1920, fewer than 400 of every 100,000 Americans died from
infectious diseases. By 1940, it was less than 200. By 1960, it’s below 100.
When’s the last time you heard of an American dying from diarrhea? “For all the millennia before this in
human history,” Coburn says, “it was all about tuberculosis and diarrheal
diseases and all the other infectious disease. The idea that anybody lived long
enough to be confronting chronic diseases is a new invention. Average life
expectancy was 45 years old at the turn of the century. You didn’t have
85-year-olds with chronic diseases.”
With chronic
illnesses like diabetes and heart disease you don’t get better, or at least not
quickly. They don’t require cures so much as management. Their existence is
often proof of medicine’s successes. Three decades ago, cancer typically killed
you. Today, many cancers can be fought off for years or even indefinitely. The
same is true for AIDS, and acute heart failure and so much else. This, to
Coburn, is the core truth, and core problem, of today’s medical system: Its
successes have changed the problems, but the health-care system hasn’t kept up.
Kenneth Thorpe, chairman of the health policy and management school at Emory University, estimates that 95 percent of spending in Medicare goes to patients with one or more chronic conditions — with enrollees suffering five or more chronic conditions accounting for 78 percent of its spending.
personal observations: When I go to the lab for blood work it is 95% elderly patients in the waiting room. I think I read that 75% of the cost of a person's health care will occur in the last 6 months of life.
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