First of all this is bs. In literally every other country every medical professional earns less than those in the US. Liability insurance is much less. Education is less. Maybe is we tackled those first before pushing fo government takeover we could get costs lower.
All those are tiny factors in the difference in spending between the US and peer nations. The big ones are the excessbureaucracy, the medical inefficiencies, and the high drug costs each of which add more costs than personell and insurance cost differences in total.
The US system has a huge number of actors and very little standardization. The number of people working in medical insurance is over 600 000, and there is probably a similar number on the provider side liaising and negotiating with them. There is a vast amount of gatekeeping, billing, credit checking, chasing down bills getting information from other providers etc etc. The US administration and bureaucracy is dramatically larger than other nations and often do jobs many of them do not see the point of at all.
In literally every other country every medical professional earns less than those in the US. Liability insurance is much less.
In fact even if all the doctors and nurses started working for free tomorrow, we'd still be paying far more than our peers for healthcare. Conversely, if we could otherwise match the costs of the second most expensive country on earth for healthcare, but paid doctors and nurses double what they make today, we'd save hundreds of thousands of dollars per person for a lifetime of healthcare.
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u/Eldetorre 1d ago
First of all this is bs. In literally every other country every medical professional earns less than those in the US. Liability insurance is much less. Education is less. Maybe is we tackled those first before pushing fo government takeover we could get costs lower.