Table 1: Clinical
United States (High Income Country)
Somalia (Low Income Country)
High life expectancy.
Low life expectancy.
Low mortality rate.
High mortality rate.
Low infant mortality rate.
High infant mortality rate.
Low adult mortality rate.
High adult mortality rate.
Cause-specific morbidity and mortality (low mortality rate due to communicable, non-communicable, and injury).
Cause-specific morbidity and mortality (high mortality rate due to communicable, non-communicable, and injury).
Low rate of infectious diseases (Cholera, Malaria, TB).
High rate of infectious diseases (Cholera, Malaria, TB).
High health service coverage.
Low health coverage.
Low risk factors.
High risk factors.
High availability of health systems as regards to physicians, nurses, and hospital beds per 10,000 people.
Low availability of health systems as regards to physicians, nurses, and hospital beds per 10,000 people.
Median availability of generic medicines in public and private sectors. …show more content…
Here, both private and public sectors play a bigger role, whereby the public sector provides enough support to a private sector in various ways. This also explains why there are enough hospital beds available to accommodate a bigger number of patients. The Government of the United States through its intervention ventures into necessary expenses ensures that enough healthcare facilities, such as clinics, are set up in various communities and centers in a bid to reduce the risk of running into shortages. In addition, the Government of the United States in collaboration with the private sector has inexorably endeavored to support one another to pay for the healthcare and improve services in all