(November 30, 2013 at 1:08 pm)enrico Wrote: You want to be silly do you?
First you talk about infectious diseases only then you take what happen only in America.
That PER CAPITA remind me something very funny.
When they talk about whether a country is rich or not they say......the country per capita whealth is such and such.
According to these idiots every person in the country suppose to share this wealth when in reality probably 90% of the wealth is own by 2 or 3% of the people.
To really measure the wealth of a country it should be taken in consideration mainly the purchasing power not the per capita.
Something similar in a sense should be apply to medical health.
When we want to know the real situation we should take in consideration the GLOBAL situation not just America where many people can delay the inevitable by chemotherapie, insulin or other means.
Wow, that's some great evidence you presented.
"Delaying the inevitable" is exactly what I've been talking about: people are living longer. This is reducing annual mortality rates, increasing population size and reducing the ratio of hospital beds to people.
Quote:By the way malaria which is the N. 1 killer globaly speaking has no cure and so dementia, Parkinson, Alzaheimer and diabetes just to mention the few so where this great medical science is?
It took me less time to find the answer to that question than it took you to write it. These are just the first results that came up for each:
Alzheimer's breakthrough
Parkinson's breakthrough
First malaria vaccine
New hope for a type 1 diabetes cure
Medical science (like all science) is exactly where it's always been: on the forefront of human knowledge and constantly pushing back the boundaries of what is possible.
Now how about you actually back up your assertions?