US healthcare system explained

Irishdude

Member
There are lots of posts from non U.S. people about the U.S. healthcare system, so I thought I would explain it for their benefit.

First of all, it's not a system at all. During WWII labor shortages and wage freezes caused employers to offer health benefits to new workers. These became embedded in employment practices. Full-time workers at companies employing more than 50 people are all offered health care coverage through their employers. Private coverage extends to 53 percent of the population, or 66 percent of those insured.

Second, the U.S. government covers many people: Its own workers, veterans through the Veterans Administration, the poor through Medicaid, and those over 65 through Medicare. These programs cover about 35 percent of the population.

About 8 percent of the population is uninsured. According to the Commonwealth Fund, "an estimated 26 million (8%) Americans lacked health insurance in 2023, with disproportionate representation among Hispanic and American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN) adults, low-income individuals, and young adults aged 19–25. While coverage has improved overall, uninsured rates remain highest in Southern states, particularly for people with less than a high school education"

Many people in the uninsured category are eligible for Medicaid but don't know about the program or choose not to apply for whatever reason.

People not eligible for employee insurance are required to buy insurance through "Obamacare." This is a Federal program supporting state-sponsored "exchanges" which offer insurance to the self-employed and others. Obamacare is pretty unpopular (I'm trying to be objective here) because a) it's very expensive; b) it mandates coverage of things that people might like to skip; and c) it's very complex and the rules are always changing.

Premiums for private insurance are usually subsidized by employers but can take a big bite out of paychecks. There are often caps and deductibles which can cause financial problems. Health care providers are incentivized to charge as much as possible because "insurance is paying."

It's a very imperfect system, to say the least. However the vast majority of people have coverage and the quality of care in the U.S. is considered high. So it's not the howling, atavistic wilderness that some folks think it is.

If I've missed anything, let me know. Of course this is a book-length topic.
 
I asked AI if our system was as good as other developed countries :

That is a very thorough and level-headed summary from your forum member. He hit the historical "accident" of how we got here perfectly—specifically how WWII-era wage freezes turned health insurance into a "fringe benefit" that we are still stuck with 80 years later.

Response to the Healthcare Synopsis​

"That’s an excellent breakdown of the 'how' and 'who' of the U.S. infrastructure. It’s important for our non-U.S. friends to see that it’s a patchwork quilt, not a designed system.
However, if we zoom out to see how this 'imperfect system' actually performs compared to other developed nations (like those in the OECD), the picture gets a lot darker. While the quality of our top-tier specialists is world-class, the system itself is currently ranked at the bottom of the pack for developed countries.
Here are a few 'missing' pieces that illustrate why many feel the U.S. position is in serious trouble:

  • The 'Value' Gap: We spend nearly $15,000 per person—double what the UK or Australia spends—yet we are the only high-income nation where life expectancy has been trending downward in recent years. We are paying the highest price in the world for shorter lives.
  • Administrative Waste: Because of the complexity mentioned in the post (Obamacare rules, private caps, deductibles), about 30% of every healthcare dollar in the U.S. goes to billing, marketing, and insurance paperwork. In countries with 'Single-Payer' systems, that overhead is usually closer to 2-5%.
  • The 'High Quality' Myth: While we have the best technology, the Commonwealth Fund consistently ranks the U.S. last overall among 11 high-income countries. We rank last on Access to Care, Administrative Efficiency, Equity, and Healthcare Outcomes.
  • The Hidden Uninsured: The post mentions 8% are uninsured, but it's the 'Under-insured' that are the real crisis for seniors and families. These are people with insurance who still can't afford their $5,000 deductibles.
 
The Hidden Uninsured: The post mentions 8% are uninsured, but it's the 'Under-insured' that are the real crisis for seniors and families. These are people with insurance who still can't afford their $5,000 deductibles.
This very real problem is often overlooked. Like , if you have insurance, you have no problems. Coming up with the money for copays, specialists, and overpriced medicines can be a real problem. By the time you’ve almost met the deductible (unless you have a catastrophic illness or accident) it’s a new year and it starts all over again.
 
People not eligible for employee insurance are required to buy insurance through "Obamacare." This is a Federal program supporting state-sponsored "exchanges" which offer insurance to the self-employed and others. Obamacare is pretty unpopular (I'm trying to be objective here) because a) it's very expensive; b) it mandates coverage of things that people might like to skip; and c) it's very complex and the rules are always changing.
While the Affordable Care Act (ACA), often called "Obamacare," was highly unpopular in its early years, its public perception has shifted significantly. As of early 2026, around two-thirds of the public holds a favorable view of the law.
Despite the early backlash, the ACA's favorability has increased as its core protections became more established:
  • Popular Provisions: Provisions such as protecting those with pre-existing conditions and allowing children to stay on their parents' insurance until age 26 are widely supported across both political parties.
  • Fear of Repeal: Polls have frequently shown that repealing the ACA is actually more unpopular than the law itself, as people fear losing their current coverage or protections.
  • Expanded Coverage: The law has significantly reduced the number of uninsured Americans through Medicaid expansion and federal subsidies.
2/3 favorability is actually fairly high for anything these days!
 
The Core Conflict: Quality vs. Cost
The primary "howling" from critics usually stems from the financial burden rather than the clinical quality:
  • High Costs: The U.S. spends more on healthcare per capita than any other wealthy nation—roughly $15,000 per person as of 2024–2025.
  • Affordability Gaps: Even with insurance, rising premiums (projected to increase by a median of 15–18% in 2026) and high deductibles can make accessing that high-quality care difficult for some.
  • Variable Outcomes: While specialized care is world-class, the U.S. lags behind peer nations in broader public health metrics like life expectancy and infant mortality, often due to disparities in access and socioeconomic factors.
 
I had insurance through the Affordable Care Act for a while when I worked for an employer who didn’t/couldn’t provide health insurance. I was very grateful for it as that was when my issues with glaucoma really got serious. I was able to visit my eye doctor regularly. When I had an acute glaucoma attack in one eye, which almost cost me my eyesight in that eye, I was able to see my doctor quickly.
Later, I was employed at a different job that did supply insurance but I was not eligible because I was a part time employee. I could only work part time because I was caretaking my stepfather and mother.
Affordable Care insurance got me through that time as well.
 
Many Americans are simply unaware of the law's impact or its specific provisions:
  • Uninsured Rates: Only about one-third of adults are aware that the uninsured rate has dropped to an all-time low since the law passed.
  • Popular Provisions: While protections for pre-existing conditions are overwhelmingly popular, fewer than half of Americans realize these protections are actually part of the ACA.
 
While the Affordable Care Act (ACA), often called "Obamacare," was highly unpopular in its early years, its public perception has shifted significantly. As of early 2026, around two-thirds of the public holds a favorable view of the law.
Despite the early backlash, the ACA's favorability has increased as its core protections became more established:
  • Popular Provisions: Provisions such as protecting those with pre-existing conditions and allowing children to stay on their parents' insurance until age 26 are widely supported across both political parties.
  • Fear of Repeal: Polls have frequently shown that repealing the ACA is actually more unpopular than the law itself, as people fear losing their current coverage or protections.
  • Expanded Coverage: The law has significantly reduced the number of uninsured Americans through Medicaid expansion and federal subsidies.
2/3 favorability is actually fairly high for anything these days!
You're right, of course. I should have said "controversial" and not "unpopular." Costs are way out of control and the program only stays afloat through massive federal subsidies.
 
I asked AI if our system was as good as other developed countries :

That is a very thorough and level-headed summary from your forum member. He hit the historical "accident" of how we got here perfectly—specifically how WWII-era wage freezes turned health insurance into a "fringe benefit" that we are still stuck with 80 years later.

Response to the Healthcare Synopsis​

"That’s an excellent breakdown of the 'how' and 'who' of the U.S. infrastructure. It’s important for our non-U.S. friends to see that it’s a patchwork quilt, not a designed system.
However, if we zoom out to see how this 'imperfect system' actually performs compared to other developed nations (like those in the OECD), the picture gets a lot darker. While the quality of our top-tier specialists is world-class, the system itself is currently ranked at the bottom of the pack for developed countries.
Here are a few 'missing' pieces that illustrate why many feel the U.S. position is in serious trouble:

  • The 'Value' Gap: We spend nearly $15,000 per person—double what the UK or Australia spends—yet we are the only high-income nation where life expectancy has been trending downward in recent years. We are paying the highest price in the world for shorter lives.
  • Administrative Waste: Because of the complexity mentioned in the post (Obamacare rules, private caps, deductibles), about 30% of every healthcare dollar in the U.S. goes to billing, marketing, and insurance paperwork. In countries with 'Single-Payer' systems, that overhead is usually closer to 2-5%.
  • The 'High Quality' Myth: While we have the best technology, the Commonwealth Fund consistently ranks the U.S. last overall among 11 high-income countries. We rank last on Access to Care, Administrative Efficiency, Equity, and Healthcare Outcomes.
  • The Hidden Uninsured: The post mentions 8% are uninsured, but it's the 'Under-insured' that are the real crisis for seniors and families. These are people with insurance who still can't afford their $5,000 deductibles.
Thank you for doing that, Paco. I didn't have the energy or the expertise to get into this kind of depth.
 
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