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by FfejL
694 days ago
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This is a horrible way to frame the study's finding. "1% of people are responsible" sounds like some group is wasting resources, or taking up an uneven share. The study looks at one year, and finds in that one year 24% of spending was on 1% of the people receiving care. That's not very surprising. 30 years ago I was in a bad car accident. I'm sure the cost of the ambulance, the emergency surgery, and the after-care was WAY more than most people average that year, and easily the most expensive medical year of my life. But it was just that one time. |
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To be somewhat fair to the original poster, they do offer a graph further down talking about total lifetime healthcare spending by percentile, which is also somewhat imbalanced and would account for spikes in healthcare spending by individuals due to accidents or temporary sickness. But despite being a better dataset to cite to make their point, they clearly didn't lead with the lifetime spending graph because it's significantly less imbalanced than just picking a specific year and so makes their argument weaker (if also more accurate).