Why the United States is the only developed nation without universal healthcare

“So, if you can’t afford to pay for your medicine, you just die?”

That was the question posed by a fellow Redditor in a forum discussing the U.S. health system. The person who posted was from a European country with socialized medicine and they were mystified at the idea of a modern, developed nation, where people could be denied medical care because they couldn’t afford it.

My first inclination, as an American, was to dissemble: “Of course, people don’t just die! I thought.

They can apply to the pharmaceutical manufacturer for a discount. Many companies offer them. They can take out a personal loan. Many people do. Medical debt is a leading cause of personal bankruptcy. People often ration their supply of expensive medications, taking less than the recommended amount, to not run out.

Read: More than a million Americans ration insulin due to high costs. by Michael Sainato. The Guardian. November 1, 2022.

But, ultimately, I had to agree with another Redditor, also from the U.S., who responded that, yes, if a person were unable to take on debt to pay the cost, ultimately they would die for lack of ability to pay.

To be more precise: First, they would probably qualify for a temporary discount through one piecemeal program or another, then they would spend their life savings, burn through their family’s life savings, borrow and beg for money, then, when they couldn’t borrow more money or pay the previous debt back, and the Go Fund Me didn’t come through, they would cut back on the medication, probably suffer a series of medical complications requiring even more expensive medical care they couldn’t afford, they would die.

The ‘best healthcare in the world’

Americans are often told that they have access to the best healthcare in the world. We are raised hearing this.

The United States does lead the world in funding the medical research that leads to new treatments, technologies and medicines.

Even with the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency recent elimination of hundreds of clincical research grants, the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) is still the largest public funder of biomedical and behavioral health research in the world.

Read: A strong National Institutes of Health is critical for the future of biomedical research and innovation. American Heart Association website. February 19, 2025.

Read: Trump’s NIH Slashed Research on Chronic Diseases in 2025. Will It Happen Again? by Anna Rogers. Mother Jones. February 19, 2026.

If you are rich enough to pay for it, you can access almost any lifesaving treatment that exists. People from other countries often travel to the U.S. to get the care they need.

The problem is, more and more Americans aren’t wealthy enough to pay for it. The cost of care has risen astronomically in recent years.

Where lack of access to healthcare used to mean that uninsured people had a hard time affording treatment. Now, even people who have health insurance are finding that they can’t afford the premiums or co-pays. In some cases, even the cost of covered services and medications is too high.

As a whole, Americans pay more for healthcare than people in any other large, developed country in the world. But, their basic utilization rates are lower — meaning they go to the doctor or hospital less often than their counterparts in other countries.

And, health outcomes for a variety of conditions are worse than in peer nations.

According to the most updated internationally comparable data available, the U.S. has higher prices-particularly among private health plans-for many healthcare services. Meanwhile, utilization of many services, including doctor’s visits, number and length of hospital stays, and a variety of inpatient surgeries, is lower than in many comparable countries. As a result, the evidence continues to support the finding that higher prices — as opposed to higher utilization — explain the United States’ high health spending relative to other high-income countries.
– Peterson KFF Health System TrackerHealth Spending: How do healthcare prices and utilization in the United States compare to peer nations?

The plan was vociferously opposed by conservative politicians, as well as the American Medical Association and the Health Insurance Association of America, which both launched massive advertising campaigns designed to defeat the legislation.

Remember ‘Harry and Louise?’

I do.

Politicians, lobbyists and physicians groups warned that the government would “ration our health care” — deciding who would have access to lifesaving medicines and treatments.

They raised the spectre of parsimonious government bureaucrats in a back room denying grandma’s chemotherapy or dad’s coronary bypass to give free health exams to poor young people.

Isn’t so much better to have indivdual freedom to choose what care you receive?

Of course, they failed to mention that private, for-profit insurance companies themselves ration access to treatments and services, limiting the care they will pay for in order to minimize payouts and maximize profits to their shareholders.

Legislation to enact the Clinton health plan never even made it to a vote in Congress and it would not be until the Obama administration that health reform would be attempted at the federal level.

Next up: In part 2, I cover ‘managed care,’ why the ACA didn’t fix everything and the current state of healthcare in the U.S.

 


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  1. […] Note: This is the second part of a three-part series looking at healthcare and health insurance in the United States. Part 1 is here. […]

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