Currently, the healthcare is managed by complicated network of multiple payers, involving both private and government health insurance options. United States spends more on healthcare comparable to other countries, but still have the lowest life expectancy and performs poorly on a variety of health outcomes. United States is the only developed country without universal healthcare. The current health care system produces expensive drugs and treatments that only few can access with high-quality insurance. The Affordable Care Act improves and expands health insurance coverage. However, it was never designed to provide universal healthcare and 30 million Americans still remain uninsured. Single-payer health system abroad is far more cost-effective than American medical care and costs much less. According to Friedman, Single-payer health system would create savings for 95% of the …show more content…
Most republicans don't support the single payer health system. American Medical Association, favors a health care system like ACA structure that subsidizes insurance for low-income individuals and families. The AMA also argues that a single-payer system would prevent private-sector innovation, create long waiting periods, and offer less patient choice. Insurance and pharmaceutical industries are strongly against the single-payer health system because this type of health system in the United States would lead to a wholesale bureaucratization of the health care system by the federal government, or even to socialized