@ClintonAlden @hutchinson @AvDebateEnjoyer USA ranks fourth in adjusted cancer survival rates, for example https://t.co/0MqzySlb6P https://t.co/z6cQxJZnMo
@unmariuss @Carlo314159 @Advo_D @RichardHanania Food regulation IS NOT what is generally understood to be considered healthcare. France might do that better. That doesn't validate your claim that their *healthcare* is better. Here's a stat: cancer surviv
@MrMarkEThomas Got any other comparators? Perhaps the WHO, EIU, EHCP, OECD, Bloomberg or better still disease specific research? Cancer here (NHS 25/26 out of 34): https://t.co/DAm9JI1UHJ
RT @PeterSellei: @JoakimZander @Ludvig_Wi När det gäller sjukvård så är det ett antal länder. Bara i Norden så är det Norge, Finland och Is…
@JoakimZander @Ludvig_Wi När det gäller sjukvård så är det ett antal länder. Bara i Norden så är det Norge, Finland och Island. Här jämförelse när det gäller cancervården: https://t.co/qV961bJf1g https://t.co/UeEPHe7pmk
@sib313 All serious studies show a close correlation between expenditure & outcomes https://t.co/193z3MbsfB
@smd400 @AGHamilton29 https://t.co/XDUShvJe96 Yet another datapoint that'd rebut your access to care argument. Americans have the 4th highest relative survival rate behind Korea, Australia, and Norway.
@steveInThrPDX @Polit_eurOpines @Fishbones2020 @WalkerBragman We're behind 7 countries that spend less than us on health-care in fact. https://t.co/iOqxnRztOi
@RealNewsNanny @RexButtts @thehill @BarackObama That's an incredibly complex thing to statistically analyse, but the data doesn't agree with you. https://t.co/FZ1Rqcgwf5
Interesting paper correlating cancer outcomes across countries with economic indicators - @BMC - https://t.co/WmANEMfOZl #HealthEquity #GlobalHealth