US Has Highest Infant, Maternal Mortality Rates Despite the Most Health Care Spending
The United States possesses the highest infant and maternal mortality rates compared with any other high-income country, even though it spends the most on health care.
Courtesy of Big Pharma and Big Food (Monsanto)
Professional medicine, went dark around the same time the Fed was created. Now, it is nothing more than a method of creating wealth, and killing the Goyim.
Go to this article, and scroll down to the section titled "Age effect: children"
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/news/lessons-from-the-lockdown-why-are-so-many-fewer-children-dying/
In '20 "well baby" doctor visits (when infants receive shots) were postponed due to lockdowns, and infant deaths (SIDS) plummeted. Look at the graph shown. Here's a quote from the article...
But the pandemic experience has brought on a surprising effect on this expected death rate among children. Starting in early March, expected deaths began a sharp decline, from an expected level of around 700 deaths per week to well under 500 by mid‐April and throughout May. [1] As untimely deaths spiked among the elderly in Manhattan nursing homes and in similar settings all over the country, something mysterious was saving the lives of children. As springtime in America came along with massive disruptions in family life amid near universal lockdowns, roughly 30% fewer children died.
Throw in the VAXXX and then check the numbers. They don't call it genocide for nothing.
Some of them, yes, but they place the blame squarely on the lack of socialist health care.
"US maternal mortality in 2020 was over 3 times the rate in most of the other high-income countries"
"The United States has lower life expectancy and much worse health outcomes than other countries, although the country spends 2-4 times as much on health care as most other high-income nations."
"The US obesity rate (42.8) was almost twice as high as the OECD average (25); obesity drives chronic conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, and cancer. Accordingly, US residents had the highest rates of chronic conditions, with 3 out of 10 in 2020 reporting having 2 or more conditions such as asthma, diabetes, depression, heart disease, and others."
They want to blame it all on lack of access to high-cost healthcare, instead of blaming the healthcare system, itself.