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by scottlocklin
2513 days ago
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>Pre-WW2 America isn't a place most people would want to return to in terms of healthcare. I dunno, the differences weren't huge, and at least people didn't go bankrupt (data not from the US, but close). https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2625386/ "Life expectancy of mature women taken from Hollingsworth8 and OPCS data for England and Wales Date Life expectancy of women at 15 years (years) 1480–1679 48.2 1680–1779 56.6 1780–1879 64.6 1891 61.6 1901 62.6 1911 66.4 1921 68.1 1951 73.4 1961 75.7 1971 76.8 1981 78.0" 1989 79.2 |
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As a specific and personal data point, I have chronic kidney disease, which developed rapidly when I was 25. With pre-WW2 medicine (no transplants, no dialysis), I might have lived to 26, maaaaybe, and even then only if I'd been able to control my blood pressure long enough for renal failure to set in instead of a stroke or heart attack.
Thanks to modern medicine, I'm now nearing 40 with a good prognosis; there's no reason to believe it will impact my life expectancy, and the impact on my quality of life is relatively minimal. Compared to dying in my mid-20s, that's a vast world of difference. I will not willingly go back to pre-WW2 medicine, thank you very much.