首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Universal Health Care, Worldwide, Is Within Reach A) By many measures the world has never been in better health. Since 2000 t
Universal Health Care, Worldwide, Is Within Reach A) By many measures the world has never been in better health. Since 2000 t
admin
2020-11-04
23
问题
Universal Health Care, Worldwide, Is Within Reach
A) By many measures the world has never been in better health. Since 2000 the number of children who die before they are five has fallen by almost half, to 5.6m. Life expectancy has reached 71, a gain of five years. More children than ever are vaccinated. Malaria, TB and HTV/AIDS are in retreat.
B) Yet the gap between this progress and the still greater potential that medicine offers has perhaps never been wider. At least half the world is without access to what the World Health Organisation deems essential, including antenatal (产前的) care, insecticide-treated bednets, screening for cervical cancer (子宫颈癌) and vaccinations against diphtheria (白喉), tetanus (破伤风) and whooping cough. Safe, basic surgery is out of reach for 5bn people.
C) Those who can get to see a doctor often pay a crippling price. More than 800m people spend over 10% of their annual household income on medical expenses; nearly 180m spend over 25%. The quality of what they get in return is often woeful. In studies of consultations in rural Indian clinics, just 12 -26% of patients received a correct diagnosis. That is a terrible waste. As this week’s special report shows, the goal of universal basic health care is sensible, affordable and practical, even in poor countries. Without it, the potential of modern medicine will be squandered.
D) Universal basic health care is sensible in the way that, say, universal basic education is sensible— because it yields benefits to society as well as to individuals. In some quarters the very idea leads to a dangerous elevation of the blood pressure, because it suggests paternalism (家长式统治), coercion or worse. There is no hiding that public health insurance schemes require the rich to subsidise the poor, the young to subsidise the old and the healthy to underwrite the sick. And universal schemes must have a way of forcing people to pay, through taxes, say, or by mandating that they buy insurance.
E) But there is a principled, liberal case for universal health care. Good health is something everyone can reasonably be assumed to want in order to realise their full individual potential. Universal care is a way of providing it that is pro-growth. The costs of inaccessible, expensive and abject treatment are enormous. The sick struggle to get an education or to be productive at work. Land cannot be developed if it is full of disease-carrying parasites. According to several studies, confidence about health makes people more likely to set up their own businesses.
F) Universal basic health care is also affordable. A country need not wait to be rich before it can have comprehensive, if rudimentary, treatment. Health care is a labour-intensive industry, and community health workers, paid relatively little compared with doctors and nurses, can make a big difference in poor countries. There is also already a lot of spending on health in poor countries, but it is often inefficient. In India and Nigeria, for example, more than 60% of health spending is through out-of-pocket payments. More services could be provided if that money—and the risk of falling ill—were pooled.
G) The evidence for the feasibility of universal health care goes beyond theories jotted on the back of prescription pads. It is supported by several pioneering examples. Chile and Costa Rica spend about an eighth of what America does per person on health and have similar life expectancies. Thailand spends $220 per person a year on health, and yet has outcomes nearly as good as in the OECD. Its rate of deaths related to pregnancy, for example, is just over half that of African-American mothers. Rwanda has introduced ultrabasic health insurance for more than 90% of its people; infant mortality has fallen from 120 per 1,000 live births in 2000 to under 30 last year.
H) And universal health care is practical. It is a way to prevent free-riders from passing on the costs of not being covered to others, for example by clogging up emergency rooms or by spreading contagious diseases. It does not have to mean big government. Private insurers and providers can still play an important role.
I) Indeed such a practical approach is just what the low-cost revolution needs. Take, for instance, the design of health-insurance schemes. Many countries start by making a small group of people eligible for a large number of benefits, in the expectation that other groups will be added later. (Civil servants are, mysteriously, common beneficiaries. ) This is not only unfair and inefficient, but also risks creating a constituency opposed to extending insurance to others. The better option is to cover as many people as possible, even if the services available are sparse, as under Mexico’s Seguro Popular scheme.
J) Small amounts of spending can go a long way. Research led by Dean Jamison, a health economist, has identified over 200 effective interventions, including immunizations and neglected procedures such as basic surgery. In total, these would cost poor countries about an extra $1 per week per person and cut the number of premature deaths there by more than a quarter. Around half that funding would go to primary health centres, not city hospitals, which today receive more than their fair share of the money.
K) Consider, too, the $37bn spent each year on health aid. Since 2000, this has helped save millions from infectious diseases. But international health organizations can distort domestic institutions, for example by setting up parallel programmes or by diverting health workers into pet projects. A better approach, seen in Rwanda, is when programmes targeting a particular disease bring broader benefits. One example is the way that the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria finances community health workers who treat patients with HIV but also those with other diseases.
L) Europeans have long wondered why the United States shuns the efficiencies and health gains from universal care, but its potential in developing countries is less understood. So long as half the world goes without essential treatment, the fruits of centuries of medical science will be wasted. Universal basic health care can help realise its promise.
It is extremely wasteful that people couldn’t get satisfying treatment after spending a fortune.
选项
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/gqYFFFFM
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayonthefollowingquestion.Youshouldwriteatleast120words
Theterme-commercereferstoallcommercialtransactionsconductedovertheInternet,includingtransactionsbyconsumersandb
A、BytakingadvantageofferriesB、Bycrossingbridges.C、Bygettingthroughtunnels.D、Byridingsubmarines.A根据选项可预测问题是如何过河,原文
A、Population.B、Industry.C、Education.D、Welfare.AA是尾句听到的与四个地区有关的原词。符合短文听力“听到什么选什么”的解题原则。
A、24.B、36.C、48.D、72.D数字题,一般要做记录并进行简单的运算。原文说到1个小时的时差需要1天来调整,那么3个时区就是3个小时的时差,所以应该用3天即72个小时,D正确。
A、Provideprofessionalstandardcare.B、Beaffectionateandcooperative.C、Befrankandseekhelpfromothers.D、Makefulluseo
Asisknowntoall,theorganizationandmanagementofwagesandsalariesareverycomplicated.Generallyspeaking,theAccount
Thepredictabilityofourmortalityratesissomethingthathaslongpuzzledsocialscientists.Afterall,thereisnonaturalr
A、Theywon’thaveanotherbreakuntilafterthefinalexams.B、It’llbeveryexcitingastheriverhassomerapidsthistimeof
A、Differenttypesofadscostthesame.B、Thecheapertheadis,themorepeoplewillnoticeit.C、Thelargertheadis,themor
随机试题
为了更好地介绍公司的服务与市场战略,市场部助理小王需要协助制作完成公司战略规划文档,并调整文档的外观与格式。现在,请你按照如下需求,在Word.docx文档中完成制作工作:将Word.docx文档中的所有绿颜色文字段落应用为“标题2,标题样式二”段落样
OneBritishschoolisfindingthatallowingchildrentolistentomusicoreventohavetheTVonwhilestudyingishelpingimpr
新生儿周围神经损伤中最常见的是(),临床以()最多见。
脂肪酸是通过何种方式进入线粒体并进一步氧化分解的
下列药物中片剂适宜嚼碎服用的是()。
网络软件是实现网络功能不可缺少的软件环境,网络软件主要包括()。
()是建设项目管理工作中的一项重要内容,并贯穿于项目建设的全过程。
下列操作不正确的是()。
(国家2009—108)用六位数字表示日期,如980716表示1998年7月16日,如用这种方法表示2009年的日期,则全年中六个数字都不相同的日期有多少个?()
设随机变量(X,Y)的联合密度函数为f(x,y)=(1)求P(X>2Y);(2)设Z=X+Y,求Z的概率密度函数.
最新回复
(
0
)