American medical culture and the health care crisis

Am J Med Qual. 1993 Winter;8(4):174-80. doi: 10.1177/0885713X9300800403.

Abstract

The health care crisis is easily defined as a progressive and massive rise in costs coupled with a failure of the system to provide care to a large minority of the population (37 million). Multiple remedies have been proposed, none of which confronts the core problem. This crisis has been largely produced by the American medical culture--how our physicians practice, what they do to and order for patients. Clearly, medical culture in other Western democracies is different, yielding better overall health care at a lower cost. A brief analysis of any of the sectors of medicine or surgery reveals the overabundance of clinical interventions that take place. The solution will require a major reduction in clinical interventions so many of which are questionable, useless, or even harmful.

MeSH terms

  • Female
  • Health Care Costs
  • Health Services Accessibility
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Practice Patterns, Physicians'*
  • Sociology, Medical*
  • United States