Perspectives

Health care in America: Let that tapeworm grow


 

Take it all over?

Here’s an idea: If you can’t beat them, join them.

Medical care is important, especially for acute illnesses and injuries, early cancer therapy, and many chronic conditions. But the real determinants of health writ large are social: wealth, education, housing, nutritious food, childcare, climate, clean air and water, meaningful employment, safety from violence, exercise schemes, vaccinations, and so on.

Why doesn’t the American medical-industrial complex simply bestow the label of “health care” on all health-related social determinants? Take it all over. Good “health care” jobs for everyone. Medical professionals will still be blamed for the low health quality and poor outcome scores, the main social determinants of health over which we have no control or influence.

Let that tapeworm grow to encompass all social determinants of health, and measure results by length and quality of life, national human happiness, and, of course, jobs. We can do it. Let that bubble glow. Party time.

And that’s the way it is. That’s my opinion.

George Lundberg, MD, is editor-in-chief at Cancer Commons, president of the Lundberg Institute, executive advisor at Cureus, and a clinical professor of pathology at Northwestern University. Previously, he served as editor-in-chief of JAMA (including 10 specialty journals), American Medical News, and Medscape.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Clinician violence: Virtual reality to the rescue?
MDedge Infectious Disease
The 2023 ‘Meddy’ awards
MDedge Infectious Disease
What do I have? How to tell patients you’re not sure
MDedge Infectious Disease
Match Day: Record number of residencies offered
MDedge Infectious Disease
State medical board chair steps down amid Medicaid fraud accusations
MDedge Infectious Disease
Old-school printer helps scientists quickly spot bacteria in blood
MDedge Infectious Disease
After the Match: Next steps for new residents, unmatched
MDedge Infectious Disease
Nurse makes millions selling her licensing exam study sheets
MDedge Infectious Disease
Celebrity death finally solved – with locks of hair
MDedge Infectious Disease
New Medicare rule streamlines prior authorization in Medicare Advantage plans
MDedge Infectious Disease