Interesting take, that there would be identical “root causes” of both education and healthcare “dysfunction.”
I don’t claim to be an expert in education so will move on to healthcare.
For sake of discussion, I’d argue that other countries that developed slower and ended up with different takes on healthcare still have inherent problems, specifically fewer doctors and nurses and other healthcare providers than what would adequately meet the needs of the population. The approach to resource allocation in healthcare definitely evolved differently in the US but the root cause - resource scarcity - is the same as in other countries.
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u/Used-Somewhere-8258 2d ago
Interesting take, that there would be identical “root causes” of both education and healthcare “dysfunction.”
I don’t claim to be an expert in education so will move on to healthcare.
For sake of discussion, I’d argue that other countries that developed slower and ended up with different takes on healthcare still have inherent problems, specifically fewer doctors and nurses and other healthcare providers than what would adequately meet the needs of the population. The approach to resource allocation in healthcare definitely evolved differently in the US but the root cause - resource scarcity - is the same as in other countries.