Health Care Facts to Think About

Congress directed the Citizens' Health Care Working Group to prepare a report to provide all Americans with a basic set of information to help start a national discussion on health care and lead to solid ideas and recommendations for creating a health care system that works for all Americans.  The Health Report to the American People can be found, in full, by clicking here. A snapshot of the report is found below.

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Cost:  How Much Do We Spend, and For What?
Key Facts about the Cost of Health Care in America:

1.  We pay for health care through both private funds and public dollars. Either way, it comes out of our own pockets.

2.  Costs are rising sharply.

3.  Higher costs can result in less coverage and less care.

4.  Our need for health care and spending varies a lot and changes over the course of our lives.

5.  Waste and inefficiency also contribute to higher costs.

Quality:  Are We Getting Our Money’s Worth?
Key Facts about the Quality of Health Care in America:

1.  Despite all the money we spend, people often do not get the care they need.

2.  Despite spending more per person on health care than other developed countries, our results are not consistently better and are sometimes worse.

3.  The quality of our health care often depends on where we live and who we are.

4.  Poor quality can consist of either too little or too much care.

5.  Medical errors are a particularly harmful form of poor quality.

6.  Our health habits affect our health and quality of our lives.

Access:  Who is Getting Care – And Who Isn’t?
Key Facts about Access to Health Care in America:

1.  Almost 46 million Americans have no health insurance.

2.  Those without coverage often don’t get the care they need.

3.  The most important source of health insurance for workers is employer-sponsored “group” coverage.  But this is getting less common and more costly.

4.  Some areas of the United States do not have enough health care providers to serve everyone’s needs.