Don’t worry, just a little bump - $70 is just around the corner. Short traders just keep making those margin calls, mortgage the house if you have to. Fortunes await you! PO is for pansies and doomers. At $70 short some more ..... it is going back to $22 .... the world is awash with oil ........ reality has nothing to do with it, its all in those charts!!!!!!!!!!
I think the value of socialized health care should be reconsidered in light of this, particularly access to testing. Its interesting that the income statistics are thereafter linked to racial ones.
"One of the researchers, Gopal K. Singh, a demographer at the Department of Health and Human Services, said “the growing inequalities in life expectancy” mirrored trends in infant mortality and in death from heart disease and certain cancers.
The gaps have been increasing despite efforts by the federal government to reduce them. One of the top goals of “Healthy People 2010,” an official statement of national health objectives issued in 2000, is to “eliminate health disparities among different segments of the population,” including higher- and lower-income groups and people of different racial and ethnic background.
Dr. Singh said last week that federal officials had found “widening socioeconomic inequalities in life expectancy” at birth and at every age level."
The one bit of good news is that life expectancy has increased at both the high and l;ow income ends of the sprecyturm, jsut the low end has not advanced nearly so much.
Beyond the issue of socialized health care, another could well be the fact that those with shortest life spans, such as alcoholics and drug abusers, mostly have very low incomes. But, I have also noticed that those who live in the poorer sections of U.S. cities, blacks in particular, seem to have a lot of obesity and this leads to so many complications, heart disease, cancer and diabetes. Perhaps blacks are more subject to obesity due to genetic make-up, I am not so sure.
The peculiarly low black life expectancy in the U.S. pulls the nation's health rankings down among developed nations.
Joined: Aug 11, 2005 Posts: 649 Location: Eastern NC
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2008 8:03 pm Post subject: Re: Life expectancy and income linked
Numerous studies have shown education level is the biggest determinant of health. This runs across every parameter. Socialized medicine though with some good points, won't address any of the biggest determinants. Smoking and a crappy diet are little influenced by access to health care, greatly influenced by education level.
Joined: Sep 25, 2004 Posts: 4392 Location: Boston, MA
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2008 10:00 pm Post subject: Re: Life expectancy and income linked
Fishman wrote:
Numerous studies have shown education level is the biggest determinant of health. This runs across every parameter. Socialized medicine though with some good points, won't address any of the biggest determinants. Smoking and a crappy diet are little influenced by access to health care, greatly influenced by education level.
I couldn't agree more.
We need to create incentives for people to lead healthier lives.
If doctors were paid based on the improvements they made in the health of their patients, I think you'd see a dramatic improvement in American lifespans in a hurry.
Of course, the majority opinion of this website would hate to see that happen. We need those old folks to die off earlier in order to make room for the rest of us.
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Joined: May 18, 2006 Posts: 3918 Location: Minneapolis, MN
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2008 10:16 pm Post subject: Re: Life expectancy and income linked
Tyler_JC wrote:
Fishman wrote:
Numerous studies have shown education level is the biggest determinant of health. This runs across every parameter. Socialized medicine though with some good points, won't address any of the biggest determinants. Smoking and a crappy diet are little influenced by access to health care, greatly influenced by education level.
I couldn't agree more.
We need to create incentives for people to lead healthier lives.
If doctors were paid based on the improvements they made in the health of their patients, I think you'd see a dramatic improvement in American lifespans in a hurry.
Of course, the majority opinion of this website would hate to see that happen. We need those old folks to die off earlier in order to make room for the rest of us.
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