Healthcare is the general expression used for the entire area of prevention, treatment and cure of illness and disease using the facilities of medical professionals and resources. Nonetheless, The WHO believes the meaning should also incorporate all associated industries and be a service available to everyone irrespective of who they, which means people as well as whole groups of individuals. The organized provision of such services may constitute a health care system.
Before the term health-care became common, English-speakers referred to medicine or to the health sector and spoke of the intervention and prevention of sickness and disease. In most developed nations and many developing countries healthcare is provided to everyone regardless of their ability to pay. This first started in the UK a few years after the end of World War 2 in 1948, and became the first healthcare service set up and run by a government.
In Italy, they have a system that works by making everyone pay into a administration funded insurance scheme which The World Health Organization consider the second best healthcare system in the world. This type of system has been copied to a degree in both Australia and Canada where it is called by the same name of Medicare. All the same, these systems of health care where everyone benefits from a government based service contrast starkly with those in The United States where almost all healthcare is paid for through the provision of insurance schemes or privately. A health care professional is someone who dedicates their skills to the prevention, intervention and aftercare of disease and illnesses with the intention to preserve and protect life and improve the lives of the disabled or infirm.
Over a relatively short period of time, the health care industry has become one of the fastest expanding in the world with an average growth rate of just over 10 percent of the gross domestic product of many developed countries and is still growing, playing a huge role in the domestic economies of most nations. Although in 2003 the healthcare costs paid to across the entire healthcare system, consumed 15.3 percent of the GDP of The USA, the biggest of any country in the world and is anticipated to reach almost twenty percent of GDP by 2016.
Presently in the the United States over 180 million citizens are looking for health care and it will be no surprise to learn that it is top of all concerns for those in and seeking employment. The costs of health care in The United States have risen so much that General Motors had looked at filing bankruptcy due to the increasing healthcare costs wearing down its auto manufacturing division. Luckily it didn?t happen after some concessions and compromises made with the unions but it does show how something like this can have an outcome on even the largest of companies.
In the United States, the prime concern of workers is their companies healthcare plans, even above their salaries, such is the importance placed on this progressively costly service. Possibly it is time health care was looked at in a different way and perhaps called health preservation with an accent on fitness and health to ease the need for a top heavy healthcare system which is becoming a worldwide problem.
This entry was posted on Friday, September 7th, 2012 at 2:19 pm and is filed under health. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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