Monday, June 11, 2018

US Healthcare History


Hospitals were owned and operated by churches and charities until 1900. The Masons had Shriner’s hospitals, there were Baptist hospitals and most denominations had them as well. Most healthcare was done at home. Doctors did house calls and sick calls and many had their offices in their homes. Patients would pay doctors in cash if they had it, but they also paid them with produce from the farm. Doctors who had offices had operating rooms in their offices. Hospital stays were limited to patients with infectious diseases and serious injuries. Birthing babies was done at home with the assistance of a doctor or midwife.

The effectiveness of medical care was severely limited until Louis Pasteur published his work in microbiology beginning in the 1860s.

Effective prevention of diseases caused by dirty drinking water became possible in 1880 when water chlorination was introduced by John Leal.

The effectiveness of treating infectious disease and inflammation was severely limited until 1928 when Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin and it was released for use in 1942.

Life expectancy rates are calculated by averaging the death age of the population. It has been increasing from age 50 in 1900 to age 80 in 2018. In 1900, the US had a higher death rate for newborns and adults who died in childbirth and those who died from inflammation like post-op infections and infectious diseases like typhus, cholera, malaria, small pox, yellow fever, influenza, tuberculosis and other diseases that are more treatable now.

Hospitals began to appear in the US in 1727 when the Ursuline nuns founded the New Orleans Charity Hospital. By the 20th century there were 400 Catholic Hospitals in the US

There are now 75 Catholic Hospitals listed.

Catholic hospitals once dominated the US and hospital costs were low, but after Vatican II, many Catholic hospitals were sold to for-profit corporations.  Prior to Vatican II in 1962, Catholic hospitals were staffed by nuns who were trained to serve as RNs. They also had nuns serving as Presidents and Hospital Administrators. They raised money to fund expansions and equipment improvements. After Vatican II, nuns began leaving the hospitals in large numbers and fewer novices were signing up to take their place.

In 1965, the passage of Medicare and Medicaid caused healthcare costs to quadruple and these costs continue to quadruple today. Lyndon Johnson began the transfer of US healthcare from the free market to government control. Prior to 1965, hospital room and board costs were $24 per day. Major Medical insurance covered all rescue and repair costs for medically necessary treatments. Insurance premiums were $25 per month and policies had a lifetime max of under $1 million.

Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader


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