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Judi Lynn

(160,543 posts)
Tue Jan 16, 2018, 07:00 PM Jan 2018

Report Details Huge Cost of Childbirth in United States, Unheard of In Most Industrialized Countries

Published on
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
byCommon Dreams

"Why any society should let anyone be bankrupted by medical bills is beyond me, frankly. It just doesn't happen in other western democracies."

by

Julia Conley, staff writer

A report published on Tuesday in the Guardian highlights the exorbitant costs associated with childbirth in the United States—often catching families by surprise and leaving them thousands of dollars in debt to hospitals—and underscores the world of difference between maternal care in the U.S. and other industrialized nations with universal healthcare.

A study by the advocacy group Childbirth Connection found that while costs vary by state and hospital, the average price tag for a vaginal delivery with no complications, including care for a newborn directly after birth, is $32,093 in the U.S. A caesarean section costs more than $51,000 on average.

The report came just days after President Donald Trump vulgarly pondered why there aren't more immigrants from Norway in the U.S. Like most industrialized countries, Norway provides healthcare to its citizens free-of-charge, and huge debts or medical bankruptcy brought on by the delivery of a child would be impossible there.

In 2015, Norway ranked as the best-performing country in the world in terms of healthcare for new mothers, according to Save the Children, and was found to have an infant mortality rate below two percent, compared with the U.S. rate of 7.9 percent.

The author of a highly respected 2007 study of medical bankruptcy in the U.S. estimated that 11 years later, as many as 56,000 households still go bankrupt annually as a result of childbirth or adoption.

"Why any society should let anyone be bankrupted by medical bills is beyond me, frankly," Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, a co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program, told the Guardian. "It just doesn't happen in other western democracies."

While insurance companies often cover much of the cost of childbirth, many American families are still caught off-guard when they learn the amount they owe facilities after delivering. Childbirth Connection found that the average insured family pays about $3,400 after a birth—more than the total cost of childbirth in other countries including Spain and South Africa.

The Guardian report also came weeks after House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) informed Americans that "we need to have higher birth rates in this country" in order to continue to fund programs like Social Security and Medicare—following the passage of the Republican Party's tax bill which many policy experts expect to trigger cuts to those programs, and decades of efforts to make prenatal healthcare and childcare less affordable and accessible to Americans.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2018/01/16/report-details-huge-cost-childbirth-united-states-unheard-most-industrialized

5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Report Details Huge Cost of Childbirth in United States, Unheard of In Most Industrialized Countries (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jan 2018 OP
Earth doesn't need higher birth rates to cover GOP tax cuts IADEMO2004 Jan 2018 #1
Big Pharm and Insur Co. are KILLING more people, BigmanPigman Jan 2018 #2
I had a healthy baby in 2005 MontanaMama Jan 2018 #3
The US does not have a 7.9% infant mortality rate torius Jan 2018 #4
My daughter was born almost 16 years ago AwakeAtLast Jan 2018 #5

BigmanPigman

(51,609 posts)
2. Big Pharm and Insur Co. are KILLING more people,
Tue Jan 16, 2018, 07:15 PM
Jan 2018

than they are saving them. The GOP is guilty of bankrupting and killing Americans through their complicity with the $$$$$$$$ health care industries.

MontanaMama

(23,322 posts)
3. I had a healthy baby in 2005
Tue Jan 16, 2018, 07:37 PM
Jan 2018

at the age of 41. As a self insured person, my deductible at the time was $12,000 and copays were around $29,000. This was the first of three instances I’ve had to refinance my home for medical bills. I’ve always been employed and always paid my bills but these setbacks are huge.

AwakeAtLast

(14,130 posts)
5. My daughter was born almost 16 years ago
Wed Jan 17, 2018, 11:45 AM
Jan 2018

My insurance was so good, I didn't pay a dime. If I had her today, I would pay 20% of the bill. What changed since then? GWB Presidency.

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