Uhh... single payer healthcare doesn't really work. It just hides the problems in a different way compared to the US system. Both systems are kind of terrible.
Uh what? I live in a nation with universal health cover, and they take care of you. If I got so much as remotely injured in the USA there would be thousands of dollars in bills. Here, you get treated without so much as a
cent in costs, and the total average cost to taxpayers here is actually lower than what the US government spends per-person anyway. Sure, any health system is going to have issues, but there's no way they can be objectively called "terrible" to the same degree. That's like comparing losing a fingernail to losing an eye, and claiming they're equivalent because they're both "disfiguring injuries".
If you look at the graph here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_total_health_expenditure_per_capitaYou can see that the USA is a total outlier in terms of total expenditure on health, while all the single-payer countries are clustered around the same point. And what does that get you? The USA is an outlier not just on how costly it is, but on how terrible the service is compare to all nations with public health services. See graph of infant mortality
Australia, my nation, has infant mortality of 3.6 / 1000 vs America's 5.96 / 1000. We also spend less than 50% of the per-capita money on health expenditure. Your system is
objectively terrible, in a relative sense, and when you say "hiding the problem in different ways" well we're "hiding the problem" by not letting so many babies die apparently. The main "problem" cited about places like Australia is that people have to sometimes
wait for the free treatment. You know, people who couldn't afford to pay for it anyway if they were Americans. You
can pay for treatment here if you want - private hospitals exists. The waiting-list is for people who don't want to or can't pay. That list would be of infinity duration in the USA.
That's like the #1 complaint: that the free stuff has a waiting list. America solves the waiting-list problem by pricing the treatment high enough to ensure most people can never afford it. Here, we prioritize on need, not cash. What you wait for in the Australian system is what's called elective surgery. i.e. things that aren't going to actually kill you instantly if they're not treated right away. So you might be waiting for some free treatments because the government prioritized those doctors to save lives instead of treating whoever is willing to pay the most money. But, unlike what the media suggests, people in Australia can still go and pay some private hospital if they don't want to wait, it's just not the
only option.
America's system is far more expensive and doesn't deliver the same level of service, in terms of letting babies die. End of story.