Summary
In most developed countries, people don’t have to worry about sifting through a dozen different health plans—and they don’t live in fear of losing their health care after losing a job. They receive more affordable, higher-quality care than Americans do. The paradox of the world’s wealthiest nation having one of the weakest health systems among developed nations has long been a vexing policy problem—without an easy solution. In this article, Vox Senior Correspondent Dylan Scott looks at how the insurance-based healthcare system in the US developed from the 1920s onwards, and why it is so complex and compartmentalised compared to systems in other developed countries.
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