Comment by peter422

Comment by peter422 2 days ago

32 replies

The quality of health care in the US is significantly higher than anywhere else in the world.

Whether that quality is necessarily (or good) is debatable, but we are getting something for the money.

You also are just completely wrong in your main point. We cannot provide the same efficacy of healthcare as we are now for 60% less. We are the richest country in the world, labor costs more here than other places.

hollandheese 2 days ago

>The quality of health care in the US is significantly higher than anywhere else in the world.

Yeah, I'm gonna need a citation for that. Because it sounds like a health insurance propoganda rather than the actual truth.

  • jopsen 2 days ago

    I tried an American PPO with $10 co-pay and no deductibles. It was awesome :)

    Nobody could tell me what anything would cost, or if the insurance would cover it. But I always ended up paying $10, whether it was a few pills or an expensive MRI I didn't need. Oh, yeah the downside is you can accidentally convince your doctor to get procedures you don't need.

    Health care in Denmark is decent. But I've been told, no when I wanted to run some tests. That would never happen on an American PPO :)

    I have had go wait, while unpleasant, it's fairly harmless (otherwise they don't let you wait).

    So if you're on an great PPO plan in the US, healthcare is great.

    Whether the outcome is better for the average Joe, is probably a different question.

    • orwin 2 days ago

      My sister used to cook on private Yachts in the Mediterranean, and mingle with that part of the population that pay 3-5k/month for private insurance, helicopter evacuation and all that. I'm pretty sure they can ask their clinics any unnecessary tests they want, too.

    • vel0city 2 days ago

      I've had PPO insurance for a few decades. I've been denied tests and procedures many times, even when I had radiologist exams that supported the surgery according to their own rules. I've been forced to wait for procedures on many occasions.

machomaster 2 days ago

> The quality of health care in the US is significantly higher than anywhere else in the world.

Simply not true.

Infant mortality and under-five mortality rate (U5MR) are one of best simple indicators of the quality of healthcare. USA's mortality is x3 (!!!) of the countries on top. This puts USA around place 50 in the world, worse than Russia...

ikr678 2 days ago

If you define quality as range of treatment options available, sure. If you define quality as range of treatment options that are accessible, absolutely not.

AstroBen 2 days ago

> The quality of health care in the US is significantly higher than anywhere else in the world.

Do you have any evidence of that?

  • peter422 2 days ago

    15 out of the top 50 and 4/6 top hospitals in the world are in the US: https://rankings.newsweek.com/worlds-best-hospitals-2025

    Again, I’m not saying the health care outcomes are better, or the value is better. I’m saying the hospitals are nicer, the doctors are the best, etc.

    Perhaps this is the wrong thing to optimize for! But we are getting something.

    • BeetleB 2 days ago

      > 15 out of the top 50 and 4/6 top hospitals in the world are in the US

      Outliers do not say much about the overall quality of healthcare in a country. Rather obvious lesson in statistics.

      Reminds me of the Russian mathematician who moved to the US after the fall of the Soviet Union. Most of his essays were criticizing American students, but in one essay he was quite frank:

      Russians who graduate with math degrees are better than Americans who do so, by a wide margin. However, the average American is better at math because they still get access to some math education in university and do not need to be a top student for admission. Whereas in Russia, if you didn't meet a rather high bar, you simply couldn't get admitted as an engineering/physics/math program, and thus couldn't further your math education (I believe he said the cutoff was even before university).

      Country with the top mathematicians, but country with worse math outcomes.

      • peter422 2 days ago

        Perhaps my language was too imprecise.

        My argument is that specifically the best care in the US is the best in the world. We have the best doctors and the best technology and the best treatments. This is not completely universal but it is also generally accurate.

        Whether or not this care is accessible or the median quality is care is good, that is different.

        I’m just saying we do get something for the money, it’s not like it all gets thrown down the drain. The best and brightest come to the US to get some of the huge spigots of money in the US healthcare system and it does drive innovation.

    • vunderba 2 days ago

      Quoting you:

      > "The quality of health care in the US is significantly higher than anywhere else in the world."

      Common Wealth Study of 10 Western Countries (U.S. lags far behind the other countries)

      https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/fund-reports/2...

      Peterson-KFF Research

      https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/quality...

      Numbeo Health Care Inex

      https://www.numbeo.com/health-care/rankings_by_country.jsp?t...

      On an anecdotal basis, I relied on the Taiwanese National Health (NHI) for years and found it vastly superior in terms of quality and cost to the United States.

      Perhaps a more accurate claim might be: The quality of the health care system in the U.S. is unparalleled provided that you are in the 1% that can afford it.

  • venturecruelty 2 days ago

    "My healthcare outcomes are great, which means American healthcare is good."

vkou 2 days ago

Expenses are definitely higher, and doctors and hospital CEOs and med school CEOs do drive nicer cars and have bigger summer dachas, but I can't say the same about quality. Six month waits for a specialist, every PCP and shrink you'd want to visit not taking on new patients, ER wait times comparable with other developed nations, worse overall outcomes...

Maybe the top 0.5% is getting better care, but I really wouldn't shed a lot of crocodile tears for them.

  • peter422 2 days ago

    See what the wait times are for the specialists in other countries, if they even exist!

    The US is also the 3rd biggest country in the world. It’s very hard to solve these things are such a massive scale.

    • vkou 2 days ago

      > See what the wait times are for the specialists in other countries, if they even exist!

      I assure you, they exist, I have been to them, and the wait times were about as long.

      > It’s very hard to solve these things are such a massive scale.

      That's goalpost-shifting nonsense that doesn't justify the outrageous cost of healthcare. And most of these problems become easier to solve with a higher population and density and larger economy, because you have way more slack in the system, and you have way more economies of scale that you can put to work.

      I'm also not complaining about healthcare in the middle of Alaska, 50 miles from a highway (or deep in the poverty belt). I'm talking about overpriced, underachieving care in wealthy metro areas.

mystraline 2 days ago

Citation definitely needed.

Ive been to doctors in different countries including the USA. Theres nothing special with general practitioners with the USA.

Or if you end up in China, you can get blood panels for like 10RMB, MRI for 30RMB, and damn near automated to boot.

Go to Mexico for dental work. What costs you here $30k costs you $2k, and they take your insurance.

The US citizens are being gouged, because our government has been bought out by corporate interests who bribe, err, campaign donate to both parties. And thats across every economic activity. Medical is just an egregious one, alongside academics.

waterTanuki 2 days ago

> The quality of health care in the US is significantly higher than anywhere else in the world.

Source, backup your claims.

Health outcomes are WORSE than most other developed countries and that's the only statistic that matters here

thrance a day ago

US average lifespan are shorter than most of western Europe's.

sofixa 2 days ago

> The quality of health care in the US is significantly higher than anywhere else in the world.

Health outcomes do not support that statement.