Life is Expensive – A state of the US Healthcare System
A MIDDLE-AGED man felt chest pains. As an executive at IBM, an information-technology firm, he had excellent health insurance, so he went straight to a specialist. His cardiologist put him through a bunch of tests, including a computerised tomography scan. A radiologist noticed something odd in his neck, so he went to a neck surgeon, who checked him out and found nothing. He went back to the cardiologist, who gave him an angiogram, which caused dangerous complications and landed him in hospital for a while. In all, he ran up more than $150,000 in medical expenses before the chest pains disappeared on their own.
When they reappeared several months later, he spoke to Paul Grundy, the head of health-care technology at IBM. Dr Grundy, a doctor of preventive medicine by training, asked him if his lifestyle had changed recently. The executive mentioned that he had taken up gardening again. Dr Grundy quickly established that his chest pains sprang from a muscle he had strained through overzealous weed-whacking.

The here above is an extract from the Life is expensive – A special report on business in America article by The Economist. The US health system is much discussed lately – with good reasons. I highly recommend any who wish to enter this discussion to read this article as it reflects pretty well where the system is today, and may open some eyes.
I also recommend this article as I laughed for a good five minutes when I saw this photo. You’ll understand why when you read its excerpt