The Growing Importance Of The Healthcare Industry
May 25, 2009 by Luke Joiner
Filed under long term care
Health care is the general term used for the entire sphere of prevention, treatment and cure of sickness and disease using the facilities of medical experts and resources. Still, The WHO believes the meaning should also incorporate all related industries and be a service available to everyone irrespective of who they, which means people as well as whole groups of people. Jointly, this provision of medical services would be known as a healthcare system.
The term health care has not always been used though and prior to this is it was often just referred to medicine or the health sector but this was used more by English speaking nations. Around the world today, most nations have a system in place to ensure that everyone receives healthcare irrespective of their social standing or financial situation. This first started in the United Kingdom a few years after the end of World War 2 in 1948, and became the first health care service set up and run by a administration.
In Italy, they have a system that works by making everyone pay into a government funded insurance scheme which The WHO consider the second best healthcare system in the world. Canada and Australia have both begun similar systems and have been running since 19.6 and the 1970’s respectively both going by the name of Medicare. These systems are almost opposite to the systems currently provided in American and South Africa although there are huge changes taking place in the system used by South Africa. health care professionals are dedicated to preventing illness and disease principally, but also to treat and protect the long expression health of their patients.
Worldwide, over recent decades, there has been a huge increase in the amount of money spent on health care and it is now one of the fastest growing sectors in every developed country with an average cost of 10 percent of the gross domestic product. Although in 2003 the health care costs paid to across the entire health care system, consumed 15.3 percent of the GDP of America, the largest of any country in the world and is anticipated to reach almost twenty percent of GDP by 2016.
In The USA there are one hundred eighty million Americans who want health care and a recent study showed that it was the number one concern of those seeking work. The steep increases in the health care system in America almost contributed to the bankruptcy of the giant car manufacturer General motors. Luckily, negotiations between the Union and GM management made a deal to reduce some of the benefits but keep operating as usual but the were force to sell off their under performing finance arm GMAC.
The American health care system costs a great deal to employers but it is the number one thing that potential workers look for in an employer and has seen many shifts in how individuals view working for any given company. Possibly it is time health care was looked at in a different way and perhaps called health preservation with an emphasis on fitness and health to ease the need for a top heavy healthcare system which is becoming a international issue.
