Money-Driven Medicine is a 2009 documentary film that offers a behind the scenes look at the American healthcare system. The 86 minute documentary explores the economics underlying, and often undermining, the $2.6 trillion US healthcare system. Produced by Alex Gibney and inspired by Maggie Mahar’s book Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much, Money-Driven Medicine looks at how the United States spends twice as much per capita on healthcare as the average developed nation yet has worse outcomes by explaining that the United States is the only developed nation with a medical system that is largely unregulated and for profit. Money-Driven Medicine includes interviews of experts including Don Berwick, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and former President and Chief Executive Officer of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement; James Weinstein of The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice and bio-ethicist Larry Churchill of Vanderbilt.
GenresDocumentaire ThèmesDocumentaire sur la santé Note77% Que le problème soit physique ou psychologique, le cœur doit être ausculté. Et c’est à l’Hôtel-Dieu de Montréal que le réalisateur Philippe Lesage a choisi de poser sa caméra pour constater avec sobriété des grands maux de notre société : solitude, détresse psychologique, problèmes sociaux, un corps qui ne suit plus une tête qui n’en peut plus. À travers un rythme lent enchaînant les nombreuses séquences captées dans les différentes salles de l’hôpital et à l’aide d’une bande-son totalement enveloppante, Ce cœur qui bat donne un visage à la maladie et prend le pouls de la souffrance.
, 1h42 Réalisé parStefan Jarl GenresDocumentaire ThèmesMaladie, Psychotrope, Documentaire sur la santé, Folie, Le handicap ActeursBjörn Granath, Lis Nilheim, Stefan Jarl Note76% A decade has gone by and the spirit of the preceding film, Dom kallar oss mods, has disappeared. Kenta is an alcoholic and lives with his girlfriend Eva. Together they have a son, Patric. Kenta's mom is in jail for manslaughter and Kenta goes to Kronoberg to greet her. Heroin also comes to play and Stoffe is one of those who falls victim to it. He lives with his girlfriend Lena and their young son, Janne. Lena later throws Stoffe out their home when she gets enough of his abuse, and he is forced to live with his mother. Kenta calls Stoffe and decides to meet him, and he tries to persuade him to give up heroin, but the two have a falling out and they separate. This film features other users from the previous film, such as Jajje and Kenta Bergkvist. The film ends with the death of a prominent person in the trilogy.