What's the average cost of delivering a baby?

Royal baby's birth cost half as much as US average for having a kid. Why do you suppose that is?

  • Oh and by the way...outcomes in the U.S. are abysmal and expensive. Don't reply that we have the best health care in the world...we don't. Think, for a moment, of all the perks of the royal baby's birth at St. Mary's Hospital: the private suite, the Champagne, the Wi-Fi, the internationally renowned doctors, the top nursing staff at the famous birthing center. Now take in this little nugget: The cost for delivering the royal baby amounted to around $15,000. The average in the U.S. is $30,000 for a vaginal delivery and $50,000 for a Caesarean. (And American new moms don't always get the "royal treatment," if you will.) A 2012 study found that the U.S. was "far and away" the most expensive developed country in which to deliver a baby — with second-place Australia billing parents for less than half what we pay. http://now.msn.com/royal-baby-birth-cost-half-as-much-as-american-birth

  • Answer:

    Many in the USA simply can't afford those costs if they're uninsured. This may be the result: U.S. has highest first-day infant mortality out of industrialized world, group reports new report reveals that the United States has the highest first-day infant death rate out of all the industrialized countries in the world. About 11,300 newborns die within 24 hours of their birth in the U.S. each year, 50 percent more first-day deaths than all other industrialized countries combined, the report's authors stated. The 14th annual State of the World's Mothers report, put together by non-profit organization Save the Children, ranked 168 countries according to where the best places to be a mother would be. Criteria included child mortality, maternal mortality, the economic status of women, educational achievement and political representation of women. Worldwide, the report found that 800 women die each day during pregnancy or childbirth, and 8,000 newborns die during the first month of life. Newborn deaths make up 43 percent of all deaths for children under five. Sixty percent of infant deaths occur during the first month of life. The top five countries to be a mom were Finland, Sweden, Norway, Iceland and the Netherlands. The bottom five were Niger, Mali, Sierra Leone, Somalia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Because of their high infant mortality rates, the U.S. only ranked number 30 this year on the report, down five spots from the 2012 report. Save the Children CEO Carolyn Miles told CBSNews.com she was shocked to find that out that the U.S. did so poorly. "We do not do as well on many of those as the Scandinavian countries," Miles admitted. The 2013 edition focused on newborn mortality rates on the first day. The report's authors stated that the first 24 hours of a child's life are the riskiest. More than 1 million babies worldwide die during their first day -- even though there are low-cost technology interventions that can save the lives of 75 percent of those children, Miles pointed out. Simple measures like using a hand-pumped mask that can help resuscitate newborn infants who aren't born breathing only costs $5 a day. Also, making sure that mothers have access to simple antibiotics -- which costs about $2 a shot -- can save up to 500,000 of those babies. "Antibiotics are very simple and very low tech. It doesn't take a doctor to administer an antibiotic injection. It can be administered by a nurse," Miles said. The problem in the U.S. is that many of the babies born here are premature. Miles said that means that most women, especially poor mothers, aren't getting enough access to medical care. "We need to make sure particularly poor mothers get access to quality prenatal care and actually go to the doctor and go to the doctor on a regular basis," she said. © 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-204_162-57583237/u.s-has-highest-first-day-infant-mortality-out-of-industrialized-world-group-reports/

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England has socialized medicine - they like good health better than war planes. It's a matter of priorities. We like war and bad health. France and England don't.

GibsonGuy

Ahhh but what is the real cost here in the USA I have no doubts the average you have stated are correct, but what Hospitals actually receive from insurance after contracted discounts are far lower. That is a falsity put forth by our healthcare that it cost X when in reality they except Y, I have often argued they should state the "real" cost which is often half to one third the billed cost. For example I routinely have blood test workups...the hospital bills close to $600 for the full workup...insurance pays $53.00 with $447 written off to insurance discount. My last stay in the hospital, 3 days close to $16000 billed, after insurance discount $5886.00 and the bad thing is....if you don't have insurance you are saddled with the total expense...how is that fair for the uninsured. So what is the real cost in America?

Jenny SL

Because the real cost is probably $3000 - $5000. They just bill an insanely high amount to the insurance company which in turn pays a fraction of it back. At a cash-clinic the cost would likely be under 5k. But of course, we can't have cash-only clinics anymore, everyone needs to have insurance instead, so that rich people can skim a few percent off the insanely-inflated prices.

TheGrimReefer

Most things cost more in the US

AIAR

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