Who needs health care—the well or the sick?
- 21 April 2005
- Vol. 330 (7497) , 954-956
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.330.7497.954
Abstract
Investment in health care, especially when it is driven by the interests of pharmaceutical companies, seems to produce a J curve. For most of the curve, the more money spent, the better the health outcomes, but after a certain point, the more spending and the more emphasis on health at the expense of other areas of human activity and achievement, the worse overall health becomes. Many poorer countries are trapped high on the long arm of the curve while richer countries seem intent on exploring the upper end of the short arm through the excessive self confidence of preventive medicine.1 The emphasis on preventive care damages patients in rich countries by tipping them towards misery. This process is built on a foundation of fear and is fanned by economic and political pressures.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adverse drug reactions as cause of admission to hospital: prospective analysis of 18 820 patientsBMJ, 2004
- Is opportunistic disease prevention in the consultation ethically justifiable?BMJ, 2003
- The pharmaceutical industry as a political playerThe Lancet, 2002
- Detection of Ductal Carcinoma In Situ in Women Undergoing Screening MammographyJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2002
- The arrogance of preventive medicine.2002
- Health: perception versus observationBMJ, 2002
- Medicalisation, limits to medicine, or never enough money to go around?BMJ, 2002
- Middlemarch.Modern Language Notes, 1957