12/30: SPR: Where America really ranks in health care
Southern Political Report: Where America really ranks in health care and hospitals
A report by John Tures of LaGrange College on where the country ranks in health care and hospitals. An excerpt:
"The most cited data comes from the World Health Organization (WHO) which compares countries’ health systems. Data comes from preventable deaths, healthy life expectancy, health performance, and health expenditures, as a percentage of GDP over the last decade.
"Unfortunately, the USA doesn’t fare as we would like it to perform. It currently ranks 37th in the world, out of 190 countries. France finished first, followed by Italy (2nd), Spain (7th), Japan (10th), Norway (11th), United Kingdom (18th), Colombia (22nd), Germany (25th), Saudi Arabia (26 th), Canada (30th), Australia (32nd) and Costa Rica (36th). We’re two spots ahead of Cuba."
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: Rep. Artur Davis faces unlikely critics in run for governor
ARKANSAS: New laws go into effect January 1
FLORIDA: Attorney General investigates legality of health insurance mandate
GEORGIA: State tallies cost of DUIs
KENTUCKY: Gov. Beshear says state budget outlook is far worse than expected
LOUISIANA: Regulation of greenhouse gases protested by Gov. Jindal
MISSISSIPPI: Third year of declining revenue could mean fewer state employees
NORTH CAROLINA: Smoking ban to begin Saturday
SOUTH CAROLINA: State lawmakers sued by residents with disabilities
TENNESSEE: Legislators may delay workers' compensation law
VIRGINIA: Gov.-elect McDonnell urges offshore drilling in state
If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org
Labels: budget, Davis, DUI, greenhouse, health, laws, offshore drilling, smoking, workers' comp


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