teleo-codex/inbox/archive/2024-09-19-commonwealth-fund-mirror-mirror-2024.md
Teleo Agents f803c35db6 vida: directed research — MA, senior care, international comparisons
- 23 sources archived across 3 tracks
- Track 1: Medicare Advantage history & structure
- Track 2: Senior care infrastructure
- Track 3: International health system comparisons

Pentagon-Agent: Vida <HEADLESS>
2026-03-10 19:45:13 +00:00

3.7 KiB

type title author url date domain secondary_domains format status priority tags
source Mirror, Mirror 2024: A Portrait of the Failing U.S. Health System Commonwealth Fund (Blumenthal, Gumas, Shah, Gunja) https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/fund-reports/2024/sep/mirror-mirror-2024 2024-09-19 health
report unprocessed high
international-comparison
commonwealth-fund
health-outcomes
access
equity
efficiency
mirror-mirror

Content

Overall Rankings (10 countries)

  1. Australia (top overall)
  2. Netherlands
  3. United Kingdom
  4. New Zealand
  5. France
  6. (remaining rankings vary by domain) ...
  7. United States (LAST)

Countries compared: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States

Rankings by Domain

Access to Care: US among worst — low-income Americans much more likely to experience access problems Equity: US second-worst (only New Zealand worse) — highest rates of unfair treatment, discrimination, concerns not taken seriously due to race/ethnicity Health Outcomes: US LAST — shortest life expectancy, most avoidable deaths Care Process: US ranked SECOND (only bright spot) — good clinical care quality when you can access it Efficiency: US among worst — highest spending, lowest return

The Core Paradox

  • US spends >16% of GDP on healthcare (2022)
  • Top two overall performers (Australia, Netherlands) have lowest spending as % of GDP
  • US achieves near-best care process scores but worst outcomes and access
  • This proves the problem is structural (access, equity, system design), not clinical quality

Methodology

  • 70 unique measures across 5 performance domains
  • Nearly 75% of measures from patient or physician reports
  • Consistent US last-place ranking across multiple editions of Mirror Mirror

Key Implication

The US system delivers excellent clinical care to those who access it, but the access and equity failures are so severe that population outcomes are worst among peer nations. The problem is not what happens inside the clinic — it's who gets in and at what cost.

Agent Notes

Why this matters: This is the definitive international benchmark showing US healthcare's structural failure. The care process vs. outcomes paradox is the strongest evidence for Belief 2 (health outcomes 80-90% determined by non-clinical factors). The US has near-best clinical quality AND worst outcomes — proving that clinical excellence alone doesn't produce population health. What surprised me: The US ranking second in care process. Most critiques of US healthcare assume the care itself is bad. It's not — it's among the world's best when accessed. The failure is entirely structural: access, equity, and the social determinants the system doesn't address. KB connections: medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm Extraction hints: Claims about: (1) the care process vs. outcomes paradox as proof that clinical quality ≠ population health, (2) US as spending outlier with worst outcomes among peers, (3) access and equity as the binding constraints on US health outcomes

Curator Notes

PRIMARY CONNECTION: medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm WHY ARCHIVED: The strongest international evidence supporting Belief 2. First international comparison source in the KB. EXTRACTION HINT: The paradox — 2nd in care process, last in outcomes — is the single most extractable insight. It's the international proof that US healthcare's problem is structural, not clinical.