You're right that the report, criteria and rankings are controversial but it's quite obvious that the US system is falling behind and that Universal Healthcare is cheaper and works better.
Quote from mschey:
Based upon what criteria...just because a study was published ranking the US 37...what does that say? It doesn't say much to me. And it certainly doesn't support the idea that socialized medicine is superior to capitalism.
...the WHO report basically measures bang for the buck: comparing a population's health with how effectively governments spend their money on health, how well the public health system prevents illness instead of just treating it and how fairly the poor, minorities and other special populations are treated.
When each country's measurements were added together, even study co-author Dr. Christopher Murray, a Harvard health economist and the health organization's chief of health policy evidence, was surprised. He had expected Scandinavian countries or Canada to be the world's best, because they're always presented as models.
Instead, Norway hit No. 11, Canada 30.
Britain, with its much-debated free national health service, came in 18th.
The report sparked immediate controversy.
"Any set of rankings that puts Finland at 31 and Italy at 2, or even France at No. 1, raises questions," said Nick Bosanquet, health policy professor at London University's Imperial College, noting that previous studies have been highly critical of Italy.
Italians themselves have expressed dissatisfaction with health care, said a surprised E. Richard Brown, director of the University of California, Los Angeles, Center for Health Policy Research.
It's long been clear "the U.S. is woefully lacking," Brown said. Proof, he said, is in the 40 million uninsured Americans amid a patchwork of different quality private insurance and government programs.
While good at expensive, heroic care, Americans are very poor at the low-cost preventive care that keeps Europeans healthy, said Princeton University health economist Uwe Reinhardt. Take prenatal care, vital to a healthy start in life. Reinhardt called France the world's role model, while many poor Americans never get prenatal care.
Regardless of debate over rankings and what criteria to use, the World Health Organization won wide praise for establishing a way countries' improvement, or worsening, can be measured.
The United States spends a stunning $3,724 per person on health each year. But measuring how long people live in good health -- not just how long they live -- the Japanese beat Americans by 4{ years, and the French lived three more healthy years. Yet Japan spends just $1,759 per person on health and France $2,125.
"That's a pretty big gap," noted Murray. "For the money we're spending, we should be able to do a lot better."
http://dir.salon.com/story/health/wire/2000/06/21/rankings/index.xml