Measuring The Health Of Nations: Updating An Earlier Analysis
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- 1 January 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Health Affairs (Project Hope) in Health Affairs
- Vol. 27 (1) , 58-71
- https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.27.1.58
Abstract
We compared trends in deaths considered amenable to health care before age seventy-five between 1997–98 and 2002–03 in the United States and in eighteen other industrialized countries. Such deaths account, on average, for 23 percent of total mortality under age seventy-five among males and 32 percent among females. The decline in amenable mortality in all countries averaged 16 percent over this period. The United States was an outlier, with a decline of only 4 percent. If the United States could reduce amenable mortality to the average rate achieved in the three top-performing countries, there would have been 101,000 fewer deaths per year by the end of the study period.Keywords
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