US Improving in Health Care Quality, But Still Lagging Behind Other Countries, New Analysis Finds

A new brief on the Peterson-Kaiser Health System Tracker finds that the quality of the U.S. health system is improving in many areas, but comparable countries continue to outperform the United States on key measures.

Analysts from the Kaiser Family Foundation compiled an overall picture of health care quality in the United States, using the best available data from numerous sources on health outcomes, quality of care, and access to services.

The brief, Measuring the Quality of Healthcare in the U.S., also discusses why existing indicators are imperfect, and outlines the challenges of establishing meaningful national quality measures that can reliably show how the system is influencing the health of Americans.  The brief explains that  we have good data on how much we are spending on health care in the United States, but know much less about what outcomes we are getting in return for that spending, and how much those outcomes are influenced by the health care system itself.

Findings based on existing quality indicators include:

Two chart collections accompany the brief.

How has the quality of the US healthcare system changed over time? provides a detailed look at statistics and trends in the U.S. system in 26 slides.

How does the quality of the US healthcare system compare to other countries? offers updated data on the U.S. system in relation to numerous other countries.

All three resources are available on the Peterson-Kaiser Health System Tracker.

Contact

Amy Jeter
(650) 854-9400
ajeter@kff.org
Craig Palosky
(202) 347-5270
cpalosky@kff.org
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