you're gambling with your money. If you lose with private healthcare you pay a lot upfront, but no matter what happens with nationalized healthcare you pay a moderate amount... forever.
... yeah and that "moderate amount" is actually less than the tax money the USA spends on medical care
you're not allowed to access.
Private US healthcare is lose/lose. You pay
more health-related taxes. Then they say "screw you, pay again" before you get even basic healthcare coverage. Then they bill you again when you go to hospital.
National healthcare works out cheaper in tax dollars than the private system. it's a win-win. They charge a
lower tax in Canada, UK, Australia related to healthcare, that covers
everyone with basic health care all the way up to major operations, all without co-pays. And you can still pay for private insurance, except they need to make it
extra good to make it competitive with the free national coverage. If you get private insurance in Australia they treat you like royalty to make the shit worth paying for. e.g.:
http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/private-health-insurance-premiums-to-rise-by-nearly-5-per-cent-20170209-gu9p8t.htmlHealth Minister Greg Hunt signed off on an average premium rise of 4.84 per cent, seeing the top tier of family hospital cover increase to about $4500 annually and singles cover to increase by about $100 to $1250.
The "top tier" private family health insurance plan in Australia costs $4500 a year! (< $US 4000) That's
three fucking weeks of median Australia median fulltime income. If you get personal coverage only, it's less than a typical Australian weekly salary, and it's partly tax deductible as well.
Given that average monthly premiums for a family in the USA are $833 according to google search, that's about $10K a year. The Australian government spends less tax money per person on health, and our most expensive private plans are about half what you pay, because
they need to compete with free.
Just comparing private cover, if you're in the USA the govenment spends
$3875 per person, then average individual premiums are $321 a month. So you're effectively paying $7727 a year in health care. And the fucking average
deductible is $4358. So as I see it, you'd need to spend
$12000 on health before your insurance even
starts to pay for any. fucking. thing.
Compare that to Australia, state and federal health spending is just under $5000 per capita, and an Australian dollar is worth 75 US cents, so that's actually $3750, so a little
less than the tax outlays for the US federal government (and we're probably missing some state spending in the USA). Then, "top tier" private cover in Australia costs another $AU 1250 which is $US 937.5, so you can have the complete package here for $US 4687.5 including all taxes and spending.