The Global Gap In Health Care Dollars For Young And Old Is Huge
The U.S. has one kind of gap. The developing world has another, as a new report points out.
by Susan Brink
May 09, 2017
3 minutes
The United States spends a lot of money taking care of the health needs of old people.
In 2010, for example, each person 65 and older received $18,424 in health care services. That's five times more than the $3,628 in spending per child under 18, and three times more than the $6,125 per working-age adult, according to the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services.
"In the developed world, people live longer with very intense disease, professor at Columbia University's Aging Center.
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