A WSJ op-ed calls out John Edwards’ exploitation of Nataline Sarkisyan

Thank you Scott Gottlieb for criticizing John Edwards on his exploitation and publicizing what has been oft-repeated here recently:

Research provides little support to Mr. Edward’s underlying premise that single-payer health-care systems would do better. On balance, data suggests that in the U.S. transplant patients do quite well compared to their European counterparts, with significantly more opportunities to undergo transplant procedures, survive the surgery, and benefit from new organs.

Some of the best data pits the U.S. against the U.K. and its National Health Service. A study published in 2004 in the journal Liver Transplantation compared the relative severity of liver disease in transplant recipients in the U.S. and U.K. The results were striking. No patient in the U.K. was in intensive care before transplantation, one marker for how sick patients are, compared with 19.3% of recipients in the U.S. Additionally, the median for a score used to assess how advanced someone’s liver disease is, the “MELD” score, was 10.9 in the U.K. compared with 16.1 in the U.S. — a marked gap, with higher scores for more severe conditions. Both facts suggest even the sickest patients are getting access to new organs in the U.S.

More coverage on the WSJ Health Blog.

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