Why the U.S. health-care system is so bad at controlling costs
Health-care spending is consistently rising around the world, but the United States is the worst performer when it comes to controlling costs. A lack of universal coverage in the U.S. and a fragmented and heavily commercialized system leads to rising costs and excessive spending. Watch the video above to learn more about why health-care costs are rising in the U.S. more than anywhere else and how that can be stopped.
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
-
Rocket company Virgin Orbit is closed down by Sir Richard Branson
Dailymotion
-
Debt ceiling deal unlikely to spark major relief rally, investment chief says
CNBC
-
How Billionaires Will Go To The Moon THIS YEAR!
Rap District
-
Earnings expectations have to be revised upward as global economy bottoms, asset manager says
CNBC
-
S. Korea aims to become world's largest arms dealer
Reuters
-
China will have to deploy more fiscal stimulus and targeted easing, HSBC strategist says
CNBC
-
This company is trying to make private jets greener
CNN -
U.S. debt ceiling deal is a 'classic compromise,' says PwC National Tax Office
CNBC
-
China should not introduce a large stimulus package now, economist says
CNBC
-
Stellantis Spotlight May 26, 2023
AutoNET
-
We're still optimistic about China for the medium to long term, says Deutsche Bank
CNBC
-
Stellantis Spotlight May 26, 2023
Dailymotion
-
Nvidia 'ratified' the excitement about A.I. with 'blowout earnings,' says Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel
CNBC
-
Aurora adjusts pool schedule to deal with staffing challenges
CBS Colorado -
Rogers WWII vet turns 100 the day after Memorial Day
40/29 TV Ft Smith-Fayetteville
-
Day Party at the Brooklyn Boardwalk kicks off the unofficial start of summer
News 12