bama Actually Made America Great Again. Here's the Data.

   - September 10, 2016                   source;BUSINESS INSIDER

by Laurie Vazquez <http://bigthink.com/experts/laurie-vazquez>
[image: Article Image]
America. Credit: Brooke Cagle/Unsplash

Believe it or not, life for the vast majority of Americans has improved
under President Obama. From health and wellbeing to economic stability and
quality of life, Americans are living better than they were 8 years ago.
And that’s not me saying it; Americans said it themselves. Polling company
Gallup
<http://www.gallup.com/opinion/queue/195176/health-during-obama-years.aspx?g_source=WWWV7HP&g_medium=topic&g_campaign=tiles>
pored over hundreds of thousands of surveys from the last 8 years in order
to come to that conclusion.

Here are the categories they compared:

   -

   Healthcare accessibility, quality, and cost
   -

   Life ratings
   -

   Exercise
   -

   Self-reported health conditions
   -

   Living standard

Healthcare might be the defining issue of Obama’s presidency. Between the
passage of the Affordable Care Act, the meltdown of the Healthcare.gov
<http://healthcare.gov> website, and the last-minute changes that didn’t
allow all Americans to keep doctors they liked, there were a lot of
healthcare-related issues to stress Americans out. Yet, according to
Gallup, more Americans have health insurance than before. Only 10.8% of the
population was uninsured, compared to a record high 17.3% in 2013.

Even more surprising is that the Affordable Care Act actually proved to be
affordable. In 2016, fewer Americans had difficulties paying for medicine
or medical care than at any time in the last 8 years.

For all that good news, however, there are some caveats. Only 19% of
Americans described their health as excellent in 2016; 22% did in 2008.
Excellent health declined for all races and income levels, but it increased
for people 65 and older.

[image: Overall Health Assessments.jpg]

Worse still, more Americans say they’re in declining health than ever
before. Obesity and diabetes rates continue to climb, while high blood
pressure and cancer diagnoses remain steady. For all that bad news, there
is one silver lining: smoking and high cholesterol have decreased across
the board.

[image: key health indicators.jpg]

The most interesting answers came from the life evaluation section of the
surveys. Gallup asked Americans to rank how close they were to living their
ideal lives on a 10-point scale. In 2008 48.9% of Americans thought they
were living 10 out of 10 lives; 55.4% do now.

Most telling of all, 80% of Americans were satisfied with their standard of
living in 2016, meaning they were happy with all the stuff they could buy
and do. That’s 7% more happy people than 2008.

The best news of all is that Americans are growing increasingly more
optimistic about their standard of living. 62% said their standard of
living was improving in 2016 while 22% said it wasn’t; that’s up from 42%
and 40% respectively after the economic disaster of 2008.

The majority of these effects can be chalked up to the economic recovery.
However, President Obama still deserves credit for passing policies like
the Affordable Care Act to ensure more people benefited from that recovery.

All that said, when we compare these Gallup results to the United Nation’s 2016
World Happiness Report <http://worldhappiness.report/>, Americans are
actually less happy. The UN uses different criterion to measure happiness--
GDP, social support, healthy life expectancy, freedom to make choices,
generosity, & trust.

[image: UN Table.jpg]

*Credit: World Happiness Report*

When those are taken into account, Americans are actually less happy than
they’ve been in roughly the same time period as the Gallup surveys:

[image: UN Changes.jpg]
*Credit: World Happiness Report*

The UN gets it data from the Gallup World Poll
<http://www.gallup.com/services/170945/world-poll.aspx>, and those
questions are a little different. According to the site, “Gallup can
analyze over 100 crucial world issues affecting people's lives -- issues
such as the global economic meltdown, the Arab Spring, the earthquake in
Haiti, good jobs and bad jobs worldwide, confidence in institutions, and
societal instability.” In order to assess these answers, Gallup asked 3,000
respondents in over 150 countries to rate the quality of their lives from
0-10. Most countries averaged smack in the middle. The US averaged 4.

The biggest factor for that drop according to the report is a shift in per
capita income and healthy life expectancy. While the economy did recover
from its 2008 levels, Americans are still cautious about their health --
for all the reasons we discussed above.
Still, the report is unclear about what any individual nation can do to
improve its health. Hopefully Americans will find a way to take the unease
out of their healthcare system and reduce their unhappiness.

__._,_.___


*​Circulated by:*
*K.Raman.*​

._,___

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