The nation's health care system is once again under the microscope as growing numbers of Americans are uninsured, costs keep rising, and the public grows increasingly worried about it.
The U.S. spends more money on health care than any other nation. Health care spending will increase to $4.3 trillion by 2017, or $13,000 per person, according to the annual projection by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Put another way, the rate of annual growth for health care will be 6.7 percent, which is three times the rate of inflation. Experts attribute the increase to higher demand for care and an aging population.
Yet higher spending on health care does not necessarily correspond to a healthier population, or even that everyone will get care. Some 47 million Americans go without health insurance, according to the Census Bureau, mostly people in jobs that don't offer it as an employee benefit.
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