American reacts to 'What Americans dont understand about Public Healthcare'

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ต.ค. 2024

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  • @BernhardGiner
    @BernhardGiner 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1309

    German here. I would summarize: any universal healthcare system is better than not having a universal healthcare system. It's way from being perfect here but at least we have something to complain about and to improve.

    • @em0_tion
      @em0_tion 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

      Yes. I'm not perfect, but at least I exist! 💪😂

    • @rosemariebrown2413
      @rosemariebrown2413 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It is good !
      get sick in America, and you won't get paid !

    • @BernhardGiner
      @BernhardGiner 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      @@em0_tion You're welcome.

    • @em0_tion
      @em0_tion 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@BernhardGiner Huh?

    • @ganjiblobflankis6581
      @ganjiblobflankis6581 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      If nothing else, it forces the price of private procedures down to something sane. Something non-urgent, but horrible like a hernia might have a waiting time of 18 months, but you could get it fixed in under a week for a few grand private.

  • @gamingtonight1526
    @gamingtonight1526 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1117

    As a Brit, I lived in America for 7 years, and had to use the American Health Care system. I prefer a broken NHS than what the American system is! I think Britain can change to improve, but Americans will never change, and this is why America is in decline...

    • @ManuelSteiner
      @ManuelSteiner 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      Unfortunately I had to deal with the NHS before, I prefer the German or Swiss system. More expensive for the people (not paid via taxes, but you chose the company and plan), and these systems work well. (Many different individual health-care insurers who compete for customers.)

    • @theexiledones1
      @theexiledones1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      As I always say, no matter how shit the healthcare system in other countries are, they are still better than whatever the fuck they have in the US.

    • @phoenix-xu9xj
      @phoenix-xu9xj 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      @@ManuelSteiner but it doesn’t work for everyone does it doesn’t work for the poor. Or should I say not so poor.

    • @beldin2987
      @beldin2987 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

      For sure. I mean germans also hate their system, just like they hate the german trains, but compared to the US its all absolute gold. However i guess constant complaining and showing up the flaws is also important if you don't want it go totally down the drain.
      Btw.: i was just recently again aware that the problems with the trains in the end started to arise when the Deutsche Bundesbahn was privatized. All was fine as long as it was not in hand of capitalists. It was only "not efficient", but hey .. beeing always on time, or having busses in areas where often nobody even uses them is not effecient. But everybody using i private car is even more ineffecient in the grander scene.

    • @Temeraire101
      @Temeraire101 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      The NHS works, sort of.

  • @kirstenlandon3043
    @kirstenlandon3043 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +566

    Californian here! My daughter now lives in the UK and--broken system or not--she's incredibly grateful for the NHS. She's always calling to tell me, "I just went to the doctor and I got a prescription. For nothing!" She's never coming back to the States.
    The worst part of all this is that most Americans don't know how their own healthcare system works! I hear people complain, "I don't want to pay for someone else's healthcare" because they clearly don't know that's exactly what they're already doing! Nearly half the country only listens to the politicians, and the politicians tell them they'd be paying higher taxes while having super long wait times and they wouldn't be able to pick their doctors--which is just a lie. No one tells them they would get to stop paying premiums and copays. I agree that if we gave the people universal healthcare, and let them see what it would really mean to them, they'd never give it up! Unfortunately, people will never push for it because they're being told it would be far worse than what they face now. Follow the money. This is capitalism on steroids and running amok. The insurance companies pay lobbyists and politicians truckloads of money so that they maintain control. Keeping people ignorant, unhealthy, and angry makes them money. It's sickening!

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,.,..,.,..,

    • @Noksus
      @Noksus 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It's kind of ridiculous how the American politicians always portray the universal healthcare as having long wait times and everything bad. As if that doesn't imply that they are incapable of making a functioning system. But really as you said, keeping the healthcare system like it is now in America is lining their pockets with more money than they could ever dream of spending. Money is the root of all evil and it has full control over America. No one in America is free, everyone is a slave to money.

    • @mariecaillaud8693
      @mariecaillaud8693 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      Another issue is the lobbying of big pharma, in europe, drugs price are regulated, as doctor's paiement, because the studies are free, and so on....
      It makes the price really

    • @khairulhelmihashim2510
      @khairulhelmihashim2510 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      there should be 2 healthcare systems that co-exist and complement each other. the universal public funded and private, and people can opt between these 2 systems that suit their needs.

    • @andreasprucha1451
      @andreasprucha1451 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      As an European it's funny to hear that. The NHS has a bit the reputation of beeing one of the worst public healthcare systems b/c it had been ruined by conservatives. But then this very basic system still seems to be better than having no public healthcare (probably b/c running healthcare as purely private system just does not make any sense as usual market-mechanisms just cannot work for healthcare)

  • @onenote6619
    @onenote6619 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +161

    What I find weird about the US healthcare outlook is that as soon as the word 'socialised' gets in there, everyone blows up. Like any form of socialism is somehow toxic. But a socialised military defence system is AOK.

    • @Tjalve70
      @Tjalve70 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      The funny thing about American's abhorrence towards anything called "socialized", is that insurance is in its very nature socialized.
      The purpose of insurance is that everyone (who has it) will bear the cost of the few that needs it. And that's the very concept of socialism.
      So USA already has a socialized health care system. It's just that they have a voluntary and privatized socialized health care system.

    • @carrstone01
      @carrstone01 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      There is no connection between socialism and social programs.

    • @Belaziraf
      @Belaziraf หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Tjalve70 That's a solidarity system. A social system redistribute equally resources. Solidarity is when everyone contribute to cover for the risks of the weaker and those who need it.
      US insurances, all sectors accounted, work differently.
      The fear and hate of socialism stem from WWII and cold war. And also shadowing and control of knowledge. There is no evil system. There are only evil people.
      To reduce the definition to its most basic form : Public services that benefit everyone or the majority is a social mechanism. Public services that aim or try to prevent people from falling too deep in the society is a solidarity mechanism. Everyone or most people contribute to maintain a minimum of living standard or chances in life.
      The main problem in the USA is also the lack of unification in the healthcare network and price regulation. Whereas most countries that have universal healthcare see it as basic human right.
      If you stop companies from making profits, they will stop to innovate. But the American miss that EU and other countries subsidies many big pharmas to research new drugs and treatments.
      They have more freedom for pricing on new products, and regulate negotiated prices with a deep knowledge of cost and capacity.
      As an example. In most countries with universal healthcare, the prices are around 200% the manufacture price. Let's take Turkey with $3 a dose of insulin and average $11 elsewhere, even in EU with high taxes on salaries. Based on that, the USA should have a manufacture price below EU price of $5.50 but still sell $99.
      Guess what "free market" that makes competition lower the prices for the customers' benefit all around the world, is turned into while "free market" is paired with "unregulated market".

    • @ianmontgomery7534
      @ianmontgomery7534 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      and they don't realise that any insurance they have is a socialised system.

    • @Belaziraf
      @Belaziraf 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@ianmontgomery7534 At least not Health insurance. Adding the plan's cost, copays and deductibles, they may fare better without.
      Besides, in my opinion, insurances follow a pattern of solidarity system as the resources are only redistributed to those who need it.
      Though I do agree they benefit from socialism everyday without knowing it.

  • @warrenpeterson6065
    @warrenpeterson6065 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +50

    I'm a Canadian who recently developed several rare diseases/disorders. I have only utilized our medical system for minor issues in the past so this adventure is new to me. To date I've had 1 ea MRI, 2 ea CT Scans, 2 ea Nuclear Medicine scans, 2 ea Ultra-Sound tests, 1 ea ECG, 1ea EKG, 1 ea EMG, and the list goes on and on to include full monthly blood work up testing. I have been tested by specialists including ENT, Internal Medicine, and Neurology. Never have I received a bill or will I. I firmly believe I would be bankrupt if I was an American.

  • @ryttyr14
    @ryttyr14 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +453

    I'm Swedish and I've NEVER heard of someone wanting to be fit to not be a burden on society. All I've ever heard is people who want to be fit because they feel better, both physically and/or about themselves, when they are fit.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,..,.,.,.

    • @HolgerNestmann
      @HolgerNestmann 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

      I am german. When I was injured of my own fault, I felt bad for all the care I was given

    • @thecommenternobodycaresabout
      @thecommenternobodycaresabout 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      @@HolgerNestmann Man, you are a German through and through. Good for you, to be honest. This mindset makes you to be more careful for all the right reasons. Keep being that way and I hope everyone else follows your example.

    • @HolgerNestmann
      @HolgerNestmann 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@thecommenternobodycaresabout Thanks - to be honest, I just wanted to give context same way ryttyr14 did. Hope this didnt come across as the meme, where germans invade the comments section.

    • @ryttyr14
      @ryttyr14 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@HolgerNestmann Not at all. I found it interesting to see your perspective. Also, you can just call me ryttyr :)

  • @Sayitlikitiz101
    @Sayitlikitiz101 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +335

    I am Franco-American and have experienced both the French and the US healthcare and there is no comparison between the two. The French system is much better and gives patients so much more freedom to choose and pick the service and doctors they want. No network BS or pre-approvals like we have them here. And the peace of mind that comes from knowing that you and yours will be cared for in your moment of vulnerability and weakness is priceless. That's freedom.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,.,..,.,.

    • @klamin_original
      @klamin_original 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      I think Americans often don’t realize all the bullshit they need to go through in their system when people tell them that in their public healthcare system almost everything is better than in the US. They’re so used to copays, deductibles, out of pocket whatsoever, preconditions, pre approvals, in network doctors, not being able to see a specialist when they need it and so on that they don’t even imagine other countries not having such weird things.
      I can only speak for the German system but everything I just mentioned doesn’t exist for medically necessary treatments. there are exceptions for dental treatments where your insurance might just cover 70 oder 80% but even that still covers most of the costs and you can always get affordable additional insurance

    • @kirstenlandon3043
      @kirstenlandon3043 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What really drives me crazy is hearing this argument from politicians: “If we let ‘them’ socialize healthcare, you won’t be able to keep your doctor!” This is one way they villainize the idea. My response is usually “Wait…so you got to go to any doctor you wanted?? Gee, that’s rare!” For those who don’t know, we typically have the option of buying an HMO plan or a PPO plan. Without going into a bunch of detail, HMOs require that you pick from a list of doctors that are “in network.” A PPO lets you choose any doctor, though there are usually still certain limits. Also, PPO plans cost significantly more than HMO plans ($800 vs $1200 per month, in my area). So the anger over picking your doctor is another incredibly stupid argument since we don’t get to do that anyway.

    • @readyforlol
      @readyforlol 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Also it’s cheaper to run.
      That’s the kicker, most americans who oppose it do so under the assumption that it’s too expensive to run to be worth it.
      But A) it’s not, and B) even if it was more expensive, it would still be worth it.

    • @klamin_original
      @klamin_original 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      @@readyforlol But they’re not ready to understand that.
      Americans who lived abroad begin to understand a lot of things that previously wouldn’t have been able to get into their mind in the US.
      Their whole upbringing relies so heavily on American ideas that other concepts don’t seem plausible.
      That’s the vibe I get from a lot of streamers btw, even if they try to understand things they often can’t wrap their head around other ideas and often seem to be overwhelmed by information and give up in the process.
      Critical thinking doesn’t seem to be part of American education.
      And I don’t mean that in an offensive way, those streamers are not guilty of anything here, the systems makes them become that way.

  • @philbaker4155
    @philbaker4155 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +105

    I paid into NHS. all my life... over the last 3 years I've has two strokes. I'm so glad of the nurses and doctors that were there to help me its the best thing that happened in Great Britain

    • @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609
      @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      I am sorry about your strokes, but I am happy for you that you had the NHS.

    • @philbaker4155
      @philbaker4155 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@mademoiselledusfonctionell1609 thankyou feeling better everyday xxx

    • @neilbarton7216
      @neilbarton7216 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      I am extremely grateful for the pacemaker in my chest that keeps me alive courtesy of the NHS

    • @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609
      @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@neilbarton7216 My dad went through two open heart surgeries, and a hip replacement. Among other things. In Sweden, we pay a bit (20-50 pounds) for a visit to the doctor, and about 15 pounds (it might have changed) per night at the hospital, but the bulk of the health care is tax funded. (Those who do not need pacemakers (which he also had one, my dad) or invasive surgeries or other demanding treatments can hopefully feel that they received their good health as a gift from the universe.)

  • @philipberthiaume2314
    @philipberthiaume2314 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +200

    In 2017, an American relative got legitimately angry when he learned that his healthcare premiums were as much as what I paid in income taxes in Canada. Canadian healthcare is paid from income taxes as is every other service we have. He could not wrap his head around the fact that we weren't paying premiums. It made him angry, he accused me of withholding information and I've never seen him since. To make matters worse, that was the year hi mother's insurance company turned her down for important medical treatment.

    • @thespanishinquisition4078
      @thespanishinquisition4078 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

      Well fun fact. By GDP, USA wastes more on healthcare than any EU country. Even the best most expensive EU healthcare systems are still cheaper than the insurance system in USA. Just saying...

    • @simonhenry7867
      @simonhenry7867 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      About 11% of the money is used to count how much money it costs.
      30% is used to sue people to bankruptcy.
      The insane counterpoint is 13-8% of the populace is uninsured.
      You could sack the lawyers and just use the money to give everyone healthcare.

    • @baronmeduse
      @baronmeduse 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Canadian healthcare is not paid for from taxes. It is paid for from newly-issued public spending by a sovereign currency issuer. Taxation is not funding it is the redemption of already-spent currency..

    • @alanpotter8680
      @alanpotter8680 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Get on a plane, go to any EU country, even without an insurance, do your treatment, pay, buy souvenirs and come back home. It'll still be a lot cheaper.

    • @philipberthiaume2314
      @philipberthiaume2314 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@alanpotter8680 well Americans used to drive into Canada by the thousands every year to buy pharma drugs. Florida and the US federal government, under Trump, now let ppl buy from Canada in bulk. It's the same medication but some made in Canada at a tenth of the cost. The US is truly a capitalist nation even at the expense of ppl's livelihood.

  • @magdamundt9483
    @magdamundt9483 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +11

    I live in Brazil. The largest Universal Health Care System in the world (covers 220 million citizens and non-citizens).
    It has MANY flaws, but is also the ONLY access to health services the majority of our population has. And it works. Not excellent, not flawless, but... it works!!
    People have full access to child-mother care, to chronic diseases, to emergency care, to rare diseases help, to specialist doctors, to dental care.
    Not in an easy way, because demand is astronomic, but still. It may take years until you get the surgery you need - when your complaint is not life-threatening. Since pandemic, it got worse, the demand has completely overwhelmed the attending structure both during and after the crisis of Covid.
    Why? Due to a negacionist president.That WE fools elected, and are still paying the price for it.
    But there is no doubt here: UHCS is one of the best reasons to love Brazil. Although...
    .... I must confess, there is a 0, 01% of a very loud citizens that fiercely disagree.

  • @kareno6986
    @kareno6986 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +301

    I can only speak about NHS Scotland but I have nothing but praise for it. My father had terminal lung cancer and my mother had a rare tumour removed from her heart in her mid 70’s. They both received excellent care and my mum is still with us 10 years later. We only pay a small % of our wages towards the NHS and I believe it’s a lot cheaper than what US citizens need to pay for health insurance.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states..,.,.,.,..,.

    • @OP-1000
      @OP-1000 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      COMMUNISM! 🤪

    • @bookllama8158
      @bookllama8158 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I also think it's important to differentiate between the people working in the system and the system itself. Many hardworking doctors and nurses in the NHS. The idea itself is great, too. Compared to many other Western European countries however, the NHS is often not able to provide the most modern standard of care. It is underfunded and plagued by staff shortages. Although the latter is a problem in many other countries, too.

    • @julianbarber4708
      @julianbarber4708 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Totally agree!..I live in Scotland, and the care that was taken of my late partner, by the Scottish NHS was incredible. Numerous middle-of-the-night ambulance call outs, plus various hospital stays. I have nothing but praise for them.

    • @alfiekelly5914
      @alfiekelly5914 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      As a Scot myself, I have nothing but love and gratitude for our NHS staff. My wife is one of them. She's a district nurse and works tirelessly. If it wasn't for the NHS, I'd have been bankrupt many years ago. I'm so grateful that my medication (life saving) costs me nothing. Of course I pay via tax, but I never need to worry about how to pay for healthcare.

  • @M3CHR0M4NC3R
    @M3CHR0M4NC3R 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +214

    The thing that always amazes me is that mental healthcare is never discussed. A lot of issues in the US are caused by the lack of mental healthcare. Something that is included in most other healthcare systems.

    • @sandrathompson1277
      @sandrathompson1277 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Yes mental health is treated just as physical is treated..I am speaking for Australia

    • @M3CHR0M4NC3R
      @M3CHR0M4NC3R 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Treating a symptom without treating the underlying cause is detrimental to a society.

    • @kyihko
      @kyihko 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@sandrathompson1277 To me in Germany it feels like it doesn't work that well. If you're privately insured (instead of publicly) you can get a therapy spot much faster, while publicly insured people usually wait 6-12 months, depending on where they live. Our system also doesn't pay everything. So if you want to use a newer/"fancier" type of therapy, you'll have to pay it completely on your own.
      That's also the case for every type of health issues. I needed braces when I was 12, and could've only gotten the old and cheap ones. But since my parents also had an insurance for my teeth we only had to pay a part of it, which sounds more like it is in the US (at least as far as I know)

    • @M3CHR0M4NC3R
      @M3CHR0M4NC3R 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@kyihko I'm sorry to hear that, it sounds rough.

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@kyihko But at least nobody in germany has to die just cause they cant afford treatment..
      at least 50.000 americans die every year just because of that..
      also medical banrupktcy is a foreign concept in germany..
      you WILL get the help you need eventually, even if it might take a while

  • @GC-sf7kx
    @GC-sf7kx 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +231

    Its easy would you prefer to pay an extra $25 a month in tax or $800 a month for health insurance that doesnt cover everything. It aint rocket science.

    • @kaelgiotto5206
      @kaelgiotto5206 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      I prefer to pay the same 800$ in tax, but I won’t need to pay extra thousands in hospital

    • @VanillaCoke1956
      @VanillaCoke1956 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

      I mean, I pay about 150 every month in taxes but I'll gladly pay those 150 to have the peace of mind that:
      - I can go to the doctor whenever I want.
      - Get sick leave without any repercussions. None of that stupid "sick days" bs where you have a limited amount of days that you'll continue to get paid by your employer.
      - Can go to the ER, get admitted immediately if it's a serious thing and not pay a single dime.
      People always harp on about "but what if I don't get sick? Then that money is just lost!" but have no idea how GOOD it is, mentally, to know you don't have to worry about shit happening.

    • @ManuelSteiner
      @ManuelSteiner 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      The German and Swiss systems are more similar to the US one than the UK one. We have many health-insurance companies, who compete for customers. You pay a yearly premium, and sometimes a bit extra for some procedures. It's much more expensive than the UK, but quality is also high (as seen in rankings).

    • @speedy7040
      @speedy7040 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@VanillaCoke1956 " but what if I don't get sick" ... wow .. are americans morons ? How do they give birth ? How do they vaccinate ? .. and do they never get OLD ?...

    • @baylessnow
      @baylessnow 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      Not rocket surgery or brain science but, the yanks seem to think that they will have to pay extra taxes ANNNND still pay for their astronimical healthcare insurance! DOH...

  • @taranvainas
    @taranvainas 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

    Spain here. Our country is considered among the happiest in the world among other things because here no one is afraid of not being able to pay medical bills when illness or a serious accident occurs or if you get pregnant. Our healthcare is universal and free, even for illegal immigrants, regardless of the costs of treatment or its duration over time. In fact, it is common in our country to bring serious cases to our hospitals from anywhere in the world if there is no treatment in their countries or if it is excessively expensive for their families. We also lead the world in organ donation. Because we understand that the most important thing in this world is health and for a truly democratic government this is perhaps the highest priority. Here in Europe we do not understand why the supposedly richest country in the world does not have this crystal clear.

    • @diablo.the.cheater
      @diablo.the.cheater 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      La razon es porque EEUU no es el pais mas rico del mundo sino el pais con mas ricos en el mundo. Si en una sala tienes 90 mendigos, un billonario(mil millonario) y 9 multimillonarios, de media en esa sala tienes 100 ricos, es una de las salas mas ricas del mundo, pero al mismo tiempo es una sala con un 90% de mendigos. Eso es EEUU, un pais con muchos ricos y ricos que son los mas ricos pero aun mas pobres y superpobres.

    • @taranvainas
      @taranvainas 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@diablo.the.cheater Estoy muy de acuerdo. USA es un espejismo.

  • @snakeoilaudio
    @snakeoilaudio 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    In America absolutely everything always boils down to: "Yes, but this black single minimum wage mom with her 15 kids then has a bigger advantage than I have, so I am against it". IMO people with this attitude don't deserve a proper healthcare system. I have no problem if they die or go broke or to hell.

    • @nicolevandeijck9071
      @nicolevandeijck9071 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      Heard this argument from an American acquaintance. I'm not paying for someone else. I take care of myself and my family.
      Thing is, a healthy population is massively more productive and thus benefits all. The reduction in stress, homelessness, all of it is SO worth it. But all they can think of seems to be ME, ME, ME. And yes. they are Trump voters.

    • @ChronicTHX
      @ChronicTHX 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@nicolevandeijck9071 Americans think that pandemics and systemic issues (like their garbage food) are just some wonky hellish scenarios.
      Give them the plague, they'll beg for healthcare.

  • @mariembalo3076
    @mariembalo3076 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    What the video does not say: France spends 12.3% of its GDP on health. The US spends 17.8% of its GDP on health and for what result? Americans live on average 76 years, French 83 years.
    Yes, the French health system is expensive but as the state reimburses health costs, it imposes regulated tariffs on hospitals, doctors and pharmaceutical manufacturers. In the end, health costs are cheaper for French than for Americans and they are better cared for regardless of their income.

  • @jens9702
    @jens9702 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +79

    Broken or not, the NHS is there for emergencies and critical care and it's amazing!!

    • @theworkshopwhisperer.5902
      @theworkshopwhisperer.5902 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      The NHS is that dependable friend who's fallen on really hard times. Times will change and they're not about to give up.

    • @duckseatbread104
      @duckseatbread104 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      NHS is kinda bad for routine care but for emergencies and critical care it's generally good and a literal lifesaver

    • @theworkshopwhisperer.5902
      @theworkshopwhisperer.5902 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@duckseatbread104 Indeed critical care is still functioning generally as normal but to sustain this resources have been diverted away from increasing the long waiting lists for less critical care. This does very quite a lot by region thought.

    • @kirstygeorgans9575
      @kirstygeorgans9575 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Australian, = had a bad fall in Wales. Went to emergency, X rays, cast on arm - whats your address so i can look you up. (me) i wont be on your system -OK - no problem - no charge (did have a pretty long wait but to be honest it wasnt an emergency )

  • @HellDuke-
    @HellDuke- 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +143

    When the UK is used as an example, yet everyone says "but you have to wait long" makes me think "that's not normal" because for any emergency cases you don't need to wait at all. You get admitted and the same day any emergency procedures will get done. Otherwise, I think the US might be a bit too far gone. The current system made outrageous pricing the norm. Initialy the goverment would have to foot the bill or have a plan to force the prices down

    • @ManuelSteiner
      @ManuelSteiner 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      There's still a lot wrong with the NHS. I'm German and experienced it a few times. The German system is less socialistic, in structure it is more similar to the USA (many healthcare insurance companies). Higher costs but better.

    • @xmascookies97
      @xmascookies97 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I mean in my country we dont have long wait times in emergencies either, at all. But for specialists it might be long, if its not an emergency. The only thing that is difficult in our country is the fkn dentist... Not covered by the government at all if you're an adult, it's 100% your own responsibility, and it's so awful cause genetics will fuck you over big time

    • @vijay-c
      @vijay-c 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      ​@@ManuelSteinerThe main problem with the NHS is that it's been defunded by the Tories over the last 13 years. As someone with a whole load of chronic illnesses, I've seen the best doctors in the country, and been at the cutting edge of medical technology (including various medicine trials & full genome sequencing). We also had pre implementation genetic screening for haemophilia on the NHS when we were having our child, just four years ago, even in it's defunded state.

    • @frankdux5693
      @frankdux5693 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      ​@@vijay-cthe NHS isn't underfunded. They just world class at wasting money.

    • @AngelaThomas-v3j
      @AngelaThomas-v3j 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Dunno about how your systems operate for example in the US do you have hospitals with no A&E department? We do here as a result of consistent mis-managment of public funding dealt by our non understanding ruling party that live in their own fictional "lala land". Personally I'm in the camp of cut everything off past south of Birmingham as for other EU countries couldn't care less there's plenty of euopeans whom were treated and then fled the country to avoid payments. (Health care debt collector in a former profession).

  • @amberfittler
    @amberfittler 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    Had to laugh when you said $10 a pack of cigarettes is expensive. Some places in Australia charge $50 for packets of 20!
    Not that I smoke or necessarily condone it myself.

    • @laurabailey2092
      @laurabailey2092 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      In BC Canada a 20 package of cigarettes is $20 dollars, could be more now as I quit smoking and I know that BC is raising the cost twice a year and now there is a stirring about banning cigarettes for people born in 2018.

    • @DanielAusMV-op9mi
      @DanielAusMV-op9mi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I mean that's kinda nice, you sure want to smoke less

    • @DanielAusMV-op9mi
      @DanielAusMV-op9mi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@laurabailey2092 that's really interesting

    • @tysej4
      @tysej4 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The Denmark Tobacco tax actually comes out to like... $10-12 USD.

    • @wlodek7422
      @wlodek7422 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Damn, in poland its like 4 dollars when you calculate the currency exchange

  • @Hirotoro4692
    @Hirotoro4692 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Banning cartoon characters on packaging? Ofc it helps lol i still remember as a kid begging mum to buy stuff because of the packaging appealed to me

  • @Bb13190
    @Bb13190 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

    I am french, living in France. I have no idea where the nurse assign to new mother for years comes from. This is completely false.
    If the new mother has health issue that requires a nurse, she will get one, but like the rest of the health issue.
    And yes we spend a lot, but when you compare what a French spend on health (tax included), it is still a lot less than an American.

    • @vijay-c
      @vijay-c 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      He also exaggerated & misrepresented the issues with the NHS - I think deliberately, given the things he got right. It was definitely a video made to push the creator's own agenda. I think the video creator is German, so is pushing the Bismarckian system as "best"

    • @ManuelSteiner
      @ManuelSteiner 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@vijay-c but you can't deny the NHS is broken. Even some brits here in the comments are saying it is... in healthcare rankings Switzerland and Germany are often among the best

    • @windshipping
      @windshipping 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Maybe they mix it with some help that is given to hire a nurse, there are those cheque emploi services and stuff like that helping with that.
      The part about heavy administration is exaggerated as well, the Carte Vitale is actually VERY good at making it simple, few countries have something like this.
      Now there are tons of things that sucks, like how year after year less medicine are fully reimbursed, but overall it is a good system.

    • @lesfreresdelaquote1176
      @lesfreresdelaquote1176 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Also, the budget of the French "Assurance Maladie" is distinct from the state budget. The "Assurance Maladie" is financed by workers as a part of their salary, which is usually equivalent to what Americans pay for their own health insurance. We also pay for a "Mutuel", which is a private insurance company (usually around 1000€ a year) to cover for extra costs such as dental and glasses. The Assurance Maladie is managed through a board that is composed of a mix of union representatives, including the "entrepreneur" union (MEDEF). The cost is about 10% of France GNP compared to 16% in the US. Furthermore, most doctors have a private practice, which is very different from the NHS.

    • @windshipping
      @windshipping 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@lesfreresdelaquote1176 Agreed, except for one point. I pay 26 euros per month for health on my salary, the company pays 250. It's the Securite sociale, ie retraite or retirement, that siphons all the revenue lol. So even with the mutuelle American pay much, much more with their 'premium whatever' that doesn't even reimburse until you reached a certain threshold. But they have higher salary in general for higher education. Lower classes have both less income AND higher health insurance cost, I don't know how they survive tbh. Better not be ill.

  • @hidayah840
    @hidayah840 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +74

    I'm half european (father) and half asian (mother). Lived in both continents and was raised with both cultures. While it's very true and much more embraced in asian culture to have this "one society mindset" where one thinks and feels for eachother and how one impacts it, it'd be extreme to say that europe is the opposite of it. While there is historical research on the topic, that western europeans are more "self centred" (can't think of the english words) I'd say it's 50-50 like yes we "don't care what others think or do" but also yes "I should think about my effect on other peoples life, careers as a whole, environment especially and other factors". Very hard to explain but at least in germany, we still have that kind of acknowledging of responsibility and personal sacrifice, thank God.

    • @emrk6517
      @emrk6517 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      This is explained in Hofstede’s cultural dimensions, specifically individualism versus collectivism. I was going to say something to this effect. I'm Finnish/European. I'd say we are individualistic (the fancier word for selfish), but also aware that we are all a part of a collective too. To use stereotypical language I'd say Asians care most about the collective, Europeans are in the middle, their bounce between the individual and the group, while the in the US it's about the individual and people aren't often even aware of the complex ways they have responsibilities as a citizen of a country, or how they as an individual could also benefit from a more collectivist society.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,..,.,..,.,.,.,.,.

    • @ReisskIaue
      @ReisskIaue 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      "Self-centered" = individualistic.

  • @anjal7041
    @anjal7041 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +148

    As. a German I am very happy to live in a society that ensures all can get the healthcare they need. Ok, I pay a lot, but in total it is less compared to what I have to pay getting severely sick. I don't want the money back I paid to the healthcare system. This would mean that I'll be seriously sick. I think it is good that a sick person or even a child or a person without a job never has to worry about money, just to get a better health

    • @wandilismus8726
      @wandilismus8726 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      8% from Brutto ist nicht wirklich viel. Ja es wird mehr je mehr du verdienst, aber es sind nicht mal 10%
      Du zahlst mehr für Rente oder Steuern. Und kriegst um Verhältnis mehr raus

    • @DanielAusMV-op9mi
      @DanielAusMV-op9mi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@wandilismus8726ich bin auch so froh über das was wir hier haben und jeder von uns sollte mithelfen das zu behalten was wir haben und es weiter ausbauen und weitergeben an andere Menschen ❤❤❤❤❤

    • @baronmeduse
      @baronmeduse 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Germany's system is just an insurance system, like here in NL. It's privatised and then the insurance companies essentially subsidised. Not everyone gets the care they need.

    • @minecraftprovie5076
      @minecraftprovie5076 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@baronmeduse there is public health care in germany. And ALSO private. Ofc private is more expensive and covers more things. But the public covers all essential needs

    • @baronmeduse
      @baronmeduse 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@minecraftprovie5076 So does 'public' require you take out an insurance policy? Or can you go to a doctor/hospital without having any sort of policy and never see a bill?

  • @TheLunaKeat
    @TheLunaKeat 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    You should react to SUS, the brazilian plublic health care system. Is a country similar in size and population to USA, and is one of the best ones in the world. Not perfect like everything specially in large countries, but they even accept people from other countries and give free medicine if you need to. There is also programs for people that can't move peasily or that live inareas with difficult access.

  • @keremcantarhan
    @keremcantarhan 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

    On the topic of Japanese healthcare, I learned a few things while living there that were quite shocking. First of all, there are no pharmacies in the same way that we do in most other places I've been to. Went I went to a dentist and was prescribed medicine, I was expecting to be sent to a pharmacy. Instead, the assistant to the doctor brought out the medicine I was given, calculated how many pills I would need, cut out that many from the box and handed them over to me, keeping the rest. This was absolutely mind-blowing but also makes so much sense, reducing improper usage as well as waste. They also have mandatory health checks where people are graded based on how healthy they are. It's not perfect, there are issues with it but you can imagine how such a system would encourage people to be more healthy on a national scale.

    • @DanielAusMV-op9mi
      @DanielAusMV-op9mi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That sounds nice ❤❤❤

    • @trelala789
      @trelala789 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But what about over the counter medicines like basic pain killers (ibuprofen/paracetamol). Those are basically only reason I ever go to the pharmacy. Would need to get them from OBGYN? (all my pain is related to my cycle) Or are you just describing prescriptions, but pharmacies still exist?

    • @stephaniecheong1815
      @stephaniecheong1815 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@trelala789You can buy them easily from the many huge pharmacies they have there.

    • @spookyspirits4462
      @spookyspirits4462 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Are pharmacists working in those places then? Pharmacists save a lot of lives here as they are essentially specialists in medication and dosage - so a doctor will know which medication to prescribe but a pharmacist will be better at knowing the safe dosages, and drug interactions. So I just wonder how that works there. It is not very uncommon for pharmacists to contest prescriptions due to unsafe dosages or combinations.

    • @spookyspirits4462
      @spookyspirits4462 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@trelala789I believe basic painkillers are also given at the doctor's as I've heard that people will go for a checkup for even minor issues like the start of a cough or something, but I'm not sure.

  • @debbiemorgan859
    @debbiemorgan859 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +200

    As a Brit, the problem with our healthcare system isn't in the healthcare, it's with the government who leave it seriously underfunded. The money that we pay into the system is being syphoned off to use for other things. A national poll was run a couple of years ago asking if people would be willing to pay an extra £1 per week to support the NHS and an overwhelming majority said yes, if they could be sure it would be used for that purchase.
    I was diagnosed with breast cancer and operations and care were exemplary and swift. I could even have had serious reconstruction surgery done for free afterwards if I'd chosen to.
    The only complaints I have is that trips to A & E take forever, it's at least a three hour wait and mental health care is seriously underfunded. If we could work on even those two things then it would be a great improvement.

    • @MeStevely
      @MeStevely 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      I recently spent 15 hours in A&E in Winchester UK. It was busy. The point is I was eventually seen and my problem was dealt with - for free.
      OK, it took a long time but I know that many people with much more urgent concerns were dealt with before me, but that's OK.
      And somehow that made me feel good that 15 hours was taken out of my life so that someone else can maybe extend theirs.

    • @lindamcgregor4080
      @lindamcgregor4080 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Recently had to go to ED in Perth WA. We waited for 7 hours to see a Dr.

    • @jonathanwetherell3609
      @jonathanwetherell3609 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Well said Debbie. The biggest problem with the NHS is funding, in real terms it has had budget reductions for 13 years.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states..,.,.,.,.,.,..,

    • @andreasprucha1451
      @andreasprucha1451 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Seems to be the problem in many countries. When government does not have the goal to provide good healthcare but just wants to provide basic healthcare as public healthcare just the keep it cheap it turns into a problem. Basic public healthcare is still better than no public healthcare, abut it's not as good as it could be.

  • @Korfax124
    @Korfax124 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +84

    Personally I think that Europeans have a mix between Asian Collectivism and American Individualism. We consider our choices and their impact on others, but we also assert ourselves (at least younger people do) toward others in terms of personal boundaries and choices. It's difficult to explain since I haven't tried before, but if you ever come to Europe (Denmark in my case) you can try to observe it yourself :)

    • @Korfax124
      @Korfax124 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@crae_s Granted, I haven't been to an east Asian country (yet), so I'm trying to use, what I've been told is, the American image of the term to make my point.
      Interesting to hear from a Chinese perspective. I wouldn't say that Northern Europeans are socialist in the political term, but rather in a cultural term.

    • @majamaya4295
      @majamaya4295 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@Korfax124vielleicht mal den Unterschied betrachten zwischen sozial und sozialistisch , wird oft in einen Topf geworfen 🙂 ist aber nicht ein und das selbe. VG

    • @emrk6517
      @emrk6517 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It's all explained in Hofstede’s cultural dimensions (individual vs collective etc.) It's interesting stuff, anyone can look it up.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states..,.,..,.,.,.

    • @squidcaps4308
      @squidcaps4308 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Europe is liberal but also communal. Individual freedoms and liberties are very important but we are still individuals who are living in a society, not alone. Liberty, equality and solidarity.

  • @ksenss2513
    @ksenss2513 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    I don't think europeans "stop smoking because they think it is better for society" but they are open to government regulations "taxes on cigartettes, sugar or banning things" because they can see it will be good for society, even if they will be impacted, too. There are very vocal groups protesting, but any poll will show the majority are for it.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,.,..,.,..,.,.,

    • @valsyaranamual6853
      @valsyaranamual6853 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Australia has gone "over the top" though.

    • @Noksus
      @Noksus 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@valsyaranamual6853 Australia is not in Europe.

    • @hawk992
      @hawk992 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@NoksusHe meant Austria, perhaps 😂

  • @DGARedRaven
    @DGARedRaven 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Speaking about mindset in Europe, here's Germany's Basic Law (our "constitution"), Article 14 says:
    (1) Property and the right of inheritance shall be guaranteed. Their content and limits shall be defined by the laws.
    *(2) Property entails obligations. Its use shall also serve the public good.*
    (3)(...)

  • @johnkemp8904
    @johnkemp8904 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I well remember a TH-cam video some time ago where an intransigent elderly US woman said of our NHS ‘If it’s free it can’t be worth having’ to which my reaction was that IF it were free that would be true (how would you run a health service for free, for God’s sake?) but as it isn’t then I hope she would change her mind, though I find that very doubtful.
    In addition, despite the USA! USA! USA! patriotism endemic over there, there seems to be no country in the world more anti-American that those inhabitants of that country whose mantra is ‘You get sick and I pay? Not on my dime!’
    I have seen US contributions to social media saying basically that if you have worked hard as a good American and ensured that your stocks are performing well then you will have no problem with medical bills.

  • @millamiqote8827
    @millamiqote8827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    I've never considered being healthy for society in my country (Sweden), no. But the idea to be healthy for yourself and/or your loved ones is something that's everywhere🤔, in media, when you talk to friends. To be healthy, to do sports, eat healthy is considered a good thing in general and is something you should want to do.

    • @andrejkocsis4671
      @andrejkocsis4671 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Yes! That is education! If you educate your kids properly you will have adults thinking properly. If you teach Bible to children, they will be religious. If you preach to them health then they will value health.

  • @kencraig8715
    @kencraig8715 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

    I grew up in Scotland and had a couple of NHS hospital visits during my childhood which were completely covered by the system. I moved to the US about thirty years ago and had to go to hospital a couple of times for Kidney Stones and despite having health insurance ended up having to pay about $5k out of pocket each time. In the UK most people who are ill will go to a Doctor without thinking about it, while in the US many people I meet are extremely reluctant to go to the ER when they are seriously injured due to the fear of the costs of treatment. The NHS has been decimated by successive Governments and is not perfect by any means, but it does provide a true, effective, basic safety net for EVERYONE which is a moral and appropriate thing for both Governments and individuals to support in my opinion. I MUCH prefer the limited NHS system in the UK, to the unfair and exorbitantly expensive US health insurance system.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,.,..,

  • @katjasaha8396
    @katjasaha8396 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +45

    My father had cancer and his medication, which was the newest at the time, would have cost thousands but was now free thanks to our free health care system. Greetings from Finland

    • @Auvas_Damask
      @Auvas_Damask 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Hello Finland 🇩🇪👋

    • @kevak1236
      @kevak1236 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      My FIL (in UK) had multiple cancers. Lymphoma, lung cancer AND bowel cancer. Three operations, chemotherapy, spent several weeks in hospital and even gene therapy. Cost to him, taxi rides to the hospital and back home, that's it. The NHS is not great at relatively minor ailments, waiting lists can be years for a hip replacement so the US system is much better for these, but, hugely expensive. However, for critical, urgent care the NHS is normally very good. You can still opt to pay private, a hip replacement would cost around £10k (about $12k) in a UK private hospital, for example

  • @peterl5804
    @peterl5804 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    If Americans believed in competition they’d get rid of their healthcare system straight away. It’s far too expensive for its relatively poor outcomes.

  • @reneemckinnon5731
    @reneemckinnon5731 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    I nearly died when you said that $10 USD is expensive for a pack of cigarettes, here in Australia the smallest packs you can get is 20 - 25 cigarettes for $35-$40+ AUD, depending on the brand and the price goes up at least once a year 😂

    • @duncancallum
      @duncancallum 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Twice a year renee and booze goes up twice a year too.

  • @EllaSilentDragon
    @EllaSilentDragon 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    Taxbased systems make those that have much money pay more. Everyone has to pay, but only as much as they are able to pay. And the rich have to pay more.
    It’s better than charging people more than they earn to get lifesaving medicine, just to avoid a little bit of taxes. (The more people are in the insurance system, the more power they have. That means they can force the medical companies to charge less.
    In the end it’s cheaper for most to just pay the taxes/public health insurance.)

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,.,..,.,

    • @Labben91
      @Labben91 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      So you steal from the rich just because they are rich.

    • @WheelyHeidi
      @WheelyHeidi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That would be true but they don’t because the insurance company doesn’t make the purchase so has no buying power. The hospitals make the purchase and as they are small purchasers have to pay more. An example given a few years ago (your last election) was that if a hospital in the US needs to buy hips they will only need to buy a few and will pay for the basic ones for $5000 each. When the NHS purchase hips, they buy 100,000 and get titanium as they last longer and are cheaper in the long run. Because they are buying more they were just over $1000. Not only cheaper but a better product. Which would you prefer?

    • @EllaSilentDragon
      @EllaSilentDragon 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@WheelyHeidi I live in Germany. And our system is a little different (mandatory health insurance for most people) but the basic results are the same. And it’s the public insurances that negotiate the prices. 😊
      I prefer every European solution over the American one. The US Americans pay more but get less out of it. 😳

    • @ChronicTHX
      @ChronicTHX 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Labben91 Rich people also have health issues and use universal healthcare.
      The % of money taking from your wage is the same for everyone. It's just that 5% of 2k and 5% of 20k doesnt translate to the same amount in the end.
      And as someone who earns really good income in my country (top 10% incomes), I'm glad to pay more so that everyone can have healthcare. My sister doesn't earn as much as me but she has access to the same quallity of healthcare. My nephew is 5, I'm glad that my money helps her get healthcare.
      Also, rich people have other sources of their wealth. Like inheriting a house, that is not taxed for the healthcare, or stock options.
      You think it's stealing just because you can't comprehend how usefull it is.
      I'd rather be in France for a pandemic than in the USA where some people will not go to the doctor just because it might cost too much.
      I wish ur country gets some shitty disease like the plague that europe had to deal with just so you can understand that it's a society issue and not an individual one when it comes to being sick. Sick people cann't work unless they want to put everyone around them in danger, they might faint, do mistakes, get other people sick.
      Your mentality is what makes society devolve.

  • @deankeith830
    @deankeith830 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    7 years ago i went to my GP with a small lump on my neck ... I was told that it was most likely a harmless cyst which would sort itself out but keep an eye on it ... but while i was there i asked her to take a look at my leg because i believed i had a pulled /torn muscle ... 5 minutes later I was shipped off to the Hospital for a scan and diagnosed with a deep vein thrombosis given an injection plus some single use injections to give myself twice a day for the next month then given an appointment 2 days later with the anti coagulant dept where i was tested and given a dosage of warfarin then after a fortnight saw a specialist and again after 3 and 6 months ... tge speed with which it rolled into action was amazing and otentially saved my life ... no bill

  • @boandersen8239
    @boandersen8239 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    You should react to some of your comments some time 😉

    • @carolfletcher9939
      @carolfletcher9939 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      He's probably worried about the backlash 😂

  • @jezlawrence720
    @jezlawrence720 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I mean... Of course you need to talk about the cost to the individual in taxation, but i mean... Its a hell of a lot less than private insurance.

  • @danmayberry1185
    @danmayberry1185 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Nearly 1 in 4 Americans have had unpaid medical bills this year .. 41% face medical debt .. whichever survey applies, add to it that US per capita health spending is (by far) the highest in the world. Someone is profiting from the misfortune of their fellow citizens. Not knocking capitalism, but there's a limit.

    • @ChronicTHX
      @ChronicTHX 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      USA is a scam. It's a country of sheeps who all think they'll live the americann dream but they just end up being purses to the wealthiest who don't hesitate to take all their money if they can, all of that while destroying their bodies. Obesity rate of the US is horrendous.

  • @a.z.983
    @a.z.983 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +67

    Years ago I moved to Austria from one former Yugoslavia´s country and was initially upset about how much of my income went to taxes and insurance. A large portion of this insurance money is spent on treating drug addicts, wich was especially anoying for me to pay for. But after a while I realized that this was an investment in my safety. None of them had to steal or commit crimes to get by, so I was less likely to have unpleasant encounters with them. Another thing I noticed is how well Austria´s retirees live (most of them). If you want to eat the best food or drink the best wine in Austria, just ask retirees for directions. When I see how happy and carefree they live, I see that the investment is worth it, so it's easier for me to part with my taxes.

    • @DanielAusMV-op9mi
      @DanielAusMV-op9mi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Literally every one is an addict ❤❤❤
      Don't be so hard on them, you might become one too or your relatives, you don't choose if you're a drug addict, it chooses you.
      Kind regards from Germany ❤❤❤

    • @a.z.983
      @a.z.983 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@DanielAusMV-op9mi Thanks, but I don't think you read the whole thing... I used to be annoyed about paying for things like this, but since I saw the big picture, I'm okay with it. I talked about drug addiction, I understand that it is a problem for many, but not for me. Still we all have problems, and mine were of a different kind therefore my priorities are different too :D
      Best regards from Austria

    • @diablo.the.cheater
      @diablo.the.cheater 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yep you understto it well, when society is healthy people are more healthy and there is less crime. Healthcare is just one of those things that makes sense, it is like the police, nobody wants the police but the police is necessary.

    • @anouksb
      @anouksb 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@DanielAusMV-op9mi drug addiction is almost never the primary problem, it is trauma and mental health issues. Drugs are used as coping mechanisms when there is no proper health care system available. To prevent drug addiction you need a good health care system...

    • @alanmusicman3385
      @alanmusicman3385 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@diablo.the.cheater My min immediately goes to a line in a UK Police drama. Experienced police office to new-starter: "Let me make it simple for you. 5% of society is rubbish - and is always going to be rubbish. The main part of OUR job is to make sure that 5% don't ruin the lives of the rest. Simple as that."

  • @ACF42069
    @ACF42069 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

    It blows my mind that Americans are paying Healthcare premiums of 1000 dollars a month and we are paying around 100euros a year (my plan is 24 euros every 3 months)

    • @ManuelSteiner
      @ManuelSteiner 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      What country? I don't believe it's Germany... in Germany it's 158 per month minimum, and around 350 on average (per month). In Switzerland it's around 400 on average. But both systems are among the top 5 in the world...

    • @ACF42069
      @ACF42069 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@ManuelSteiner I am from Belgium but it depends from person to person how much you actually pay

    • @Northerner-NotADoctor
      @Northerner-NotADoctor 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And how much is deducted from your wage directly for the healthcare purpouse?

    • @ACF42069
      @ACF42069 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Northerner-NotADoctor I can check I dont know the exact amount

    • @ACF42069
      @ACF42069 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Northerner-NotADoctor We pay almost the most taxes in the world in Belgium so it will be a good amount

  • @rushinroulette4636
    @rushinroulette4636 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

    Dont forget, it is not only the health care premium you wont be paying any more, but also no (or extremely low) co-pay when you need services. In Germany a day in the hospital is EUR 10,00 which would be considered the "co-pay" and it doesnt matter if you are in a regular room or in the ICU hooked up to 20 machines... the EUR 10,00 stays (limited to a maximum of 30 days in a year after which there is no cost).
    Necessary Medication for an adult is EUR 5,00 per box (zero for children and students) and htere is an annual maximum limit to that as well depending on how much you earn.
    Hence the European jokes about Breaking bad not being realisticly possible here.

    • @alexia2189
      @alexia2189 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Yes, I get antidepressants prescribed every 3 mo and they are totally free. It helps a lot

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states..,.,..,.,.....

    • @armiiiist
      @armiiiist 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Co pay for emergency rides 10 to 15€
      I had a heart attack some yrs ago and now have a shitload of pills. I pay 175 eur per year.
      In US.. i dont even want to know

    • @TheBayzent
      @TheBayzent หลายเดือนก่อน

      Why are you charging people for being in the hospital wtf?

  • @halbeliebe
    @halbeliebe 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I don't know what the original video is saying here. Of course the money for universal health care must come from somewhere and that somewhere is in a way a tax. But as I understand it Americans do pay a lot of money for their health insurance and health care... And that would be different...

  • @AP-yd1wz
    @AP-yd1wz 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    The American healthcare system is so expensive that I have no doubt if it was converted into a decent European style universal healthcare system, the taxes needed to fund it would be way lower than the total private healthcare premium currently paid for all Americans insured, even considering many Americans are not insured at all.
    And a universal healthcare scheme does not even require the entire sector to be state run. Most could still be privately run.

  • @mabus4910
    @mabus4910 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +68

    I think Europeans are somewhere in between asia and america. Doing something for yourself is not seen as a bad thing. But, for example, the majority of us think that taxes are a good thing (as long as the money is not wasted), we generally attach importance to keeping our neighbourhood clean and the majority also try not to offend other people with their own behaviour. On the other hand, many people in Europe, for example, have no desire to sacrifice anything just to combat climate change. Health insurance is also a constant topic. People are happy to pay in, but they also expect good services in return and complain when they don't get what they expect. And no, nobody would stop smoking for the love of health care. It's more likely that smoking will decrease thanks to long-term campaigns.

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Yeah, in Europe we tax the unhealthy stuff to help pay the expenses. There's not much stigma to people living unhealthy, if they can afford it, they've paid the bill already.

    • @Stefus87
      @Stefus87 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Asia is vastly different. Waaay more than Europe, which is already very different from country to country. Saying "asia" as a common thing is borderline ignorant. M80.. over half of the world's population lives in Asia.

    • @mabus4910
      @mabus4910 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Stefus87 True. I was thinking China and Japan and I think that is what he was refering to. But yeah, you are absolutely correct.

    • @ulrike9978
      @ulrike9978 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes, I would also say it's somewhere in between. In the other hand, "don't be a burden in society" seems to be ingrained in me somewhere - since I've become disabled and therefore need regular medical treatments without being able to contribute anymore via income tax, I'm constantly fretting about the cost of it all. And I know the system is set up the way it is, so that people like me have a safety net, but the guilt is still there.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,.,.,..,.,.,..,.

  • @Blixthand
    @Blixthand 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    I'm glad you mentioned insurance and raised premiums and such. I've heard several Americans argue that they don't want Public Health Care because they don't want to pay for anyone else's healthcare and those people clearly don't understand how insurance works, unless they've opted for no insurance and hoping they'll never need it, which I guess we can't do in countries with tax funded health care. I mean the most basic explanation of an insurance is many people put a little bit of money in a pile every so often, so that if one person needs a lot of money he can take some from the pile. But with insurance you are also dealing with owners and shareholders looking to make a profit out of your money and there are people making decisions regarding if and how much money you can take from the pile when you need it.

    • @mettelindegardnielsen9411
      @mettelindegardnielsen9411 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Also if you need your insurance a lot, often for price for your insurance increase, since you're seen as high risk customer (this is only the case if the state haven't made a law against it)

    • @volkhardhenschel1863
      @volkhardhenschel1863 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      at min 16:22 hi Ryan, you don't understand the system of NHC! It was very well explained by now but if you talk while NHC is well explained and you try to put commercial arguing in it you lost because of wrong understanding.

    • @scottmarshall3963
      @scottmarshall3963 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      As I've reminded people from time-to-time, with a national/public/social healthcare system, you may well be contributing to other people's healthcare through your taxes, but they are *also* contributing to *_yours_* through *their* taxes.

  • @JT.Pilgrim
    @JT.Pilgrim 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    15:18 thats not actual freedom. Freedom is having a government that to protects you from others “freedom”. In Canada and in Europe we do put a much higher emphasis on community than individualism.

    • @kleinerfarmer1
      @kleinerfarmer1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The good old question of 'were does one's freedom end and another one begin' or is it just 'freedom of the consequences of ur own doing' those peps want?

    • @T0MT0Mmmmy
      @T0MT0Mmmmy 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@kleinerfarmer1in US America it seems to be "one's freedom nevers ends, even when it clearly limits other's freedoms".

    • @TheBayzent
      @TheBayzent หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      In the US your freedom ends where Big Corporations begin. The fact they have no right to stop companies from collecting personal data is astonishing.

  • @JoannaHammond
    @JoannaHammond 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Did you say $10 a pack.... That is bloody cheap. They cost more than twice that in the UK, about $21.

  • @KinGzeDK
    @KinGzeDK 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    About the cartoon characters: The example in this video is with Tony the tiger on the box of Frosties - I'm 40 soon and know the name of the tiger and I'm sure many of my age does. I have two kids aged 4 and 7 and they have no clue about Frosties. The don't know Tony the tiger and to my kids Frosties is just cornflakes. They don't know about the sugar coating and we haven't introduced them to it, so they don't really care about Frosties.

  • @RevPeterTrabaris
    @RevPeterTrabaris 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    The really scary thing to me is, to get to the point of enacting an NHS-style medical system in the U.S.we would have to first vote and win some kind of statement that agrees that we, as a people, want everyone else to be cared for in the country. That is, in my opinion why we can't get there. American citizens don't see the intrinsic worth or value in all of their fellow citizens. In this country, such a vote would fail.

    • @gerdahessel2268
      @gerdahessel2268 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Attention sarcasm: But they are such nice and friendly people. So much nicer than for example Germans. And they are believing christians, too - love your next as you love yourself - and what not. Sarcasm end.

    • @TehPoet
      @TehPoet 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I know some Americans who don't want a UK style healthcare system because "I don't want to pay for someone elses care" which is incredible, because that's exactly what health insurance is doing...

    • @davidhuett3579
      @davidhuett3579 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@TehPoet Half the American population are not too bright! You only need to look at the level of support for Donald Trump to tell you that.

    • @HealthyDisrespectforAuthority
      @HealthyDisrespectforAuthority 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You're forgetting the people that don't want our money grubbing, on the take from big pharma government, to have anything to do with healthcare.
      We can fire a doctor.. we can't fire the administrative, no medical training regulators.

  • @FHB71
    @FHB71 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

    I - as a German - actually wonder whether one can call our system a public healthcare system, since health insurance is mandatory here basically. In the end you "perceive" it as a simple monthly reduction in your income and do not care much about it and when you need it, it's there. It is not a tax that I pay, I pay an insurance company and the money goes into a fund that pays for me and all the other insured people, so that is the social aspect of it. And actually I think it is a great idea.

    • @joebleibaum
      @joebleibaum 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      That is why healthcare is but a part of the social system, Germany invented back in the day. Must have been a success with so many countries all over the world adopting combined social system of public health care, accident insurance, unempoyment benefits and pension. Thank you, Otto von Bismarck and Emperor Wilhem I.

    • @AshendaFiremyst
      @AshendaFiremyst 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      We ALREADY pay for Medicare. Also, Cancer Treatments are expensive. It's generic for some people. What about thyroid disease which causes weight gain and obesity?
      Bernie actually did. He said that he'd go for tax the rich, which could easily fund it.

  • @jandevries3252
    @jandevries3252 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    Netherlands here. We have a private-public insurance that everybody must have (individually for all of 18 years and above). On top of that every person pays a percentage (6.8%) of the income in a state managed system and the employer contributes to the same(5.5%). The basic insurance costs around € 140 per month, if you want dental care or physiotherapy you can add packages that can cover your needs but these can add up to an additional € 100 per month.
    We get a lot for it. You pay the first € 200 for GP prescriptions, you pay the first € 385 for specialist/hospital care and all above is catered for.

  • @zone_tonex_games677
    @zone_tonex_games677 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Fastest way for American person to lose substantial weight is to go on 2 weeks vacation outside america. because america now have way to much sugar in everything. Bread have two or three times more sugar.

    • @TheFeldhamster
      @TheFeldhamster 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      And it's not even sugar, but HFCS, high fructose corn syrup. Which is even more unhealthy than real sugar. And therefore banned in the EU.
      But the US grows more corn than they can eat, feed to animals, and export, so they needed to find new ways to use it -> HFCS. Which is cheaper than real sugar (which is made from either sugar cane or beets). So, food companies make more profit by using this cheaper, more unhealthy alternative AND it's also so cheap that they can put it into everything which will make people want to eat even more of it. No wonder so many Americans are obese.

  • @aidanoreilly6948
    @aidanoreilly6948 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Wait, the question about how it will be paid for doesn’t come up? It’s the first question, every time universal health care is talked about.

  • @bevhowell7665
    @bevhowell7665 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Just home from a day procedure at Melbourne heart hospital, amazing hospital, well looked after the nurses and doctors are really good with bedside care. I payed nothing , so proud of our system Australia

  • @colinbirks5403
    @colinbirks5403 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    U.K.? I've had major spinal surgery, the front removed from my skull (injury.) Knee replacement, Tumor removed from my bladder, and lots of other lesser things. My Wife has received heart surgery 4 times. I've still got a decent bank account thanks, and I was just a common working man, not a millionaire. I'll stay where we are thanks.

    • @josewilliams6094
      @josewilliams6094 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wise words from a health care consumer.

  • @Narangarath
    @Narangarath 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    17:54 On the topic of banning huge bottles (or other massive junk food packages/servings), it really does make sense. It's a completely different thing psychologically to, for example, drink one (2 litre) bottle of Coke than go through 4 (500ml) bottles. Smaller sizes make you go through the whole evaluation of "Am I still thirsty? Do I really want another Coke? Can I even be bothered to get up from the couch?" even if you're not doing it consciously. Also specifically with pop, everyone knows it goes flat pretty quick after you open the bottle, so you might as well drink it all as fast as possible, where smaller bottles really make a difference when you're looking at an over 10% sugar content. Let me repeat, literally 1/10 of regular Coke is sugar! It makes a BIG difference whether you're consuming 50 grams or 200 grams of sugar with your dinner, especially if you're doing it every day.

    • @MrDomingo55
      @MrDomingo55 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I moved in with my girlfriend decades back and she soon had me sorted out; No coke or other fizzy drinks (except beer), NO junk food, etc. She is a great cook, though. Over the years, I personally stopped adding sugar to my coffee, stopped eating cakes, except in rare cases, etc. Still eat small amounts of dark chocolate, not much sugar there. I certainly do NOT eat heavily processed food and cereals I have for breakfast have NO sugar added but I add a mix of nuts and seeds. My weight has been around 74kg for most of my adult life and now that I do not work its even reduced to around 70Kg. When we visited Spain and France a few years back I was shocked by amount of sugary additions and chocolate chips to a bag of muesli or other types of cereals. One could not easily find something as plain as rolled oats.

    • @maddinar6727
      @maddinar6727 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Exactly. And the argument with "I want to bring it to a party" is just not valid. Buy more bottles. The price per litre isn't supposed to change. Just the size of individual portions.

    • @Narangarath
      @Narangarath 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@maddinar6727 Right, or just get a case of 12/24 cans and bring that to the party, easy peasy. They'll be more convenient after you run out of clean glasses/solo cups anyway. I don't disapprove multi packs, but they _should_ split into reasonable portions.

  • @thomascleo
    @thomascleo 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Sweden here, I dont understand how you could live with that stress it must be to be worried about going to the doctor? I hope you soon get public healtcare,,,,LOVE FROM SWEDEN❤❤❤

    • @Facetterdk
      @Facetterdk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Most Americans do not live with this stress, because they are covered by insurance.

  • @nathanangelus
    @nathanangelus 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    ⏩⏩⏩French here. You Americans have a fallacious definition of freedom/liberty ; for you it means "to be able to do what ever I want as if I were alone on a desert island". The thing is you are not alone on a desert island, you are part of a society made of other human beings. And as we say in France since 1789 in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, "one's freedom/liberty stops where someone else's starts". On a highway, you can't drive over 130km/h because other people on the road want to stay alive : your freedom to drive as fast as you want contradicts the freedom of other people to be unarmed by you, so 130km/h is the compromise in order to make those two liberties coexist. So in France and in Europe, companies don't have the freedom to do whatever they want because society has to protect its people. In Europe, we do consider ourselves as individuals, of course, but as we are part of a group, we do value that individuals have responsabilities towards the group, and vice versa, the group has responsabilities towards individuals. Yeah, you have the freedom to buy bad food as much as you want, but the group also considers that at some point, maybe you are not making those bad choices in your life just because of you, but maybe because society failed you to provide you the right education, maybe because society let advertising convince you to do stuff you shouldn't. Simply because the group/society considers that you're only human, that you can make mistakes, that life can be so complicated for humans and that we are stronger as a group to face life's challenges. It's not a question of "socialism" or "communism", it's a question of finding the right balance between the group and the individual, it's just a question of justice and fairness for all, just being kind, understanding and respectful to each other.

  • @JT.Pilgrim
    @JT.Pilgrim 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    There is no comparison between public health systems and private system. From Canada. We have serious issues. But i would tale this system every time no questions asked.

    • @fedodosto3162
      @fedodosto3162 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Absolutely! I'm also from Canada (Montréal) and our system has a lot of flaws but I can see my doctor, have blood tests, medication, hospital stays, I had cataractes surgery, at not cost to me.(except for taxes but I'm retired so small tax bill) Our system is sometimtes bad but it's GREAT"

  • @mabus4910
    @mabus4910 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    Hey Ryan: It would be interesting to learn something about Indiana actually. It is probably one of the US states I know the least about. Everybody has at least some knowledge about Florida or California, but not Indiana. (at least I think)

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,..,.,.,

    • @klarasee806
      @klarasee806 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Great idea 👍

    • @m.f.1132
      @m.f.1132 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      you know at least one Thing... Indiana Jones is from Indiana🤓

  • @Paul-pl6dl
    @Paul-pl6dl 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Here in Australia we pay a medicare levy that is 1.5% that is built in to our tax rate so you don't really see it, it's just taken out of your pay each week I have had three major surgeries in my life 1) Major Dental Surgery 2) Open Heart Surgery 3) And Shoulder Surgery I used the Medicare system the cost was zero and the only one I had to wait for was number 3 because it wasn't life threatning the first 2 I had done straight away

    • @Hun7ahVods
      @Hun7ahVods 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      yeah can agree, medicare has come in clutch for me and its levy is not something i think about , from this video i guess that falls under the 'once they have it they wont want to give it back, like social security'

  • @Insommer
    @Insommer หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I dont understand why people say the NHS is terrible or broken, ive lived in England all my life, i have never once had an issue with the NHS, alll my appointments have been prompt, never found myself waiting for a long period of time, even when dealing with non-life threatening issues they have always been dealt with immediately. Different parts of the UK will be different i suspect, i can imagine in London its worse as there are just so much more people there, but nothing stops those people from going outside london and using other hospitals. The NHS is fine, sure it could be better, sure we should pay our nurses and doctors more, but ultimately its a free healthcare system, totally 100% free, it functions fine and is an example of a health care system that is free and functions just fine and will not brankrupt you if you are sick.
    My father was diagnosed with cancer last year, from initial doctors visit to confirmation was 3 weeks, he was started on chemo with in 5 weeks and was completely cancer free within 6 months, he has nothing but good things to say about the service he had and frankly would be dead now if not for it.
    Every person in the UK could also opt to use any of the multiple private health care systems we have and often do for cosmetic stuff or non life threatening issues. But on the whole most people still use the NHS, i had private healthcare through my job for a long time and never used it, i just went to my NHS doctor like most people would.
    Free health care is a right in my opinion and everyone should be entitled to it, sure it's not perfect, (though i personally cannot give an example of why it isn't from my own experience) but it's better than not having a system and potentially losing everything over an illness you have no control over.

  • @hardyboy1959
    @hardyboy1959 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Canadian here. When Tommy Douglas introduced public healthcare, the doctors went on 23 day strike in an attempt to force the government to drop it.

  • @JT.Pilgrim
    @JT.Pilgrim 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    12:42 it worked. When child advertising stopped things got way better. Then we got internet lol

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Advertising to children is controlled to avoid pester power, children being persuaded to want something and pressure the parents to buy it.

    • @JT.Pilgrim
      @JT.Pilgrim 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@grahvis yup!

  • @101steel4
    @101steel4 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    I have nothing but praise for NHS England.
    Always had excellent service, and I'm alive today because of it.

    • @iangt1171
      @iangt1171 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I totally agree. This idiot Kraut has no idea how good the NHS can be. Okay, there are lots of things which need attention in the NHS, not just England either, but when I needed them to save my life, they were there for me and have been since.

    • @mhorworshipper7456
      @mhorworshipper7456 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It is ok, but in comparison with the Spanish one, is not as good

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@mhorworshipper7456 I don't live in Spain.
      English one has always been great for me.

    • @mhorworshipper7456
      @mhorworshipper7456 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@101steel4 i understand.... but I am an spaniard that studied in Liverpool and unfortunately got yo be hospitalized there for ten days... I am just telling you that, yes, UK´s is one of the worse in Europe

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@mhorworshipper7456 I'm sorry for your bad experience. But we can only go by our own experiences. In my 50 years living in England (not Liverpool btw) I've never had any negative treatment from the NHS. In fact it's been brilliant, I couldn't ask for better.
      I know people who have had bad experiences in Spain, but you can't blame the whole system on a few cases.

  • @dianeleitch
    @dianeleitch 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Lived in the States for 31years and had a very good but expensive medical insurance. 2/3rd was paid by my employer, The British Embassy, 1/3rd paid by myself.Total monthly $850. I had 3 separate surgeries while there. The total for all 3 was $230.000. I paid a co-payment of $2000. Treatment was ok, but the Insurance company has you out as soon as possible. No after care, unless you make an appointment yourself, which again more money and co-payment. It is all about the rich getting richer. If you can't afford insurance, well, you're basically up .... creek without a paddle.

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states.,.,..,.,.,.

  • @YTcolinT
    @YTcolinT 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    All the US has to do is tax guns and ammunition to pay for a free health care system.

  • @joannedickie7863
    @joannedickie7863 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Plenty of Australians complain about our Medicare system but the bottom line is you will receive immediate free health care for any life threatening or emergency care. There are waiting lists for elective surgery such as hip replacements but we do have the option of paying for private health cover that allows you to utilise the private health system to get much quicker elective care.

  • @marisavl1
    @marisavl1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Like Spanish Doctor (Surgeon), I’m very proud of our Health System free totally o e of the best of the world .

  • @oliverfoldager291
    @oliverfoldager291 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    As a danish vegan, it all good bro😂. You make good videos, keep em comming👍

  • @jeanauguste-f7i
    @jeanauguste-f7i 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    I had an accident and broke my back on holiday. I was on a French island in the Caribbean. I got free treatment there paid for by the NHS. Simply by showing a card called a GHIC issued in uk (general health insurance card) which I didn't pay a penny for. You can't beat the NHS looking after UK citizens wherever they are.

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Was that after brexit? I thought GHIC didn't work for brits since then. Actually I was thinking of EHIC but same question applies sine you were on a French island.

    • @jeanauguste-f7i
      @jeanauguste-f7i 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@barneylaurance1865 hi as far as I thought the card did the same it just changed it name from European health insurance card to general health insurance card. They even gave me a hip replacement as they saw how bad it was on the xrays. I was in Martinique.

    • @gdok6088
      @gdok6088 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@barneylaurance1865 Got my new GHIC card a few months ago. It provides the same cover as EHIC basically.

  • @Devnet94
    @Devnet94 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    According to IMDB, Michael Moore is 70 this year (I don't know the exact date) and his last movie was in 2018.

    • @wildflower314
      @wildflower314 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      He makes a lot of podcasts though

    • @nobodyimportant2470
      @nobodyimportant2470 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      His career kind of died when it came out that he lied during "Supersize Me" as he claimed he wasn't drinking, smoking, or doing drugs and it was just the McDonald's food that ruined his health. He later admitted he had a long substance abuse history which includes the time he was making the documentary.

  • @MartinJohansson-nn5dv
    @MartinJohansson-nn5dv วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    2024 World Happiness Report.
    Finland
    Denmark
    Iceland
    Sweden
    Israel
    Netherlands
    Norway
    Luxembourg
    Switzerland
    Australia
    New Zealand
    Costa Rica
    Kuwait
    Austria
    Canada
    Belgium
    Ireland
    Czechia
    Lithuania
    United Kingdom
    Slovenia
    United Arab Emirates
    United States
    Germany
    Mexico
    Uruguay
    France
    Saudi Arabia
    Kosovo
    Singapore
    17,000 people worldwide from March 22 to May 23, 2024.
    The best countries for quality of life were scored across the following metrics:
    Affordable
    Good job market
    Economically stable
    Family-friendly
    Income equality
    Politically stable
    Safe
    Well-developed public education system
    Well-developed public health system
    Top 10 countries in the world for quality of life
    Denmark
    Sweden
    Switzerland
    Norway
    Canada
    Finland
    Germany
    Australia
    Netherlands
    New Zealand
    Is there a reason that the US citizens not learn anything from this?

  • @spursgog835
    @spursgog835 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I never waited or found fault with the top class services I have received from the NHS. There would be rioting in the streets if they tried to abolish it!

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states..,.,..,.,.,.

  • @liosscip
    @liosscip 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    i would dare to say: there are more groups and companies interested that you are sick than there are which are interested you stay healthy in the usa

  • @ALX-xl7fr
    @ALX-xl7fr 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    10 dollars for a pack of cigarettes is expensive... in Australia a pack costs $40+ (AUD, about $27+ USD)

    • @Gazer75
      @Gazer75 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      How big are those packs? A pack of 20 here in Norway is around 160-170 NOK or around 15 USD.

    • @lucylindsay3442
      @lucylindsay3442 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Pack of 20 m*boro today appears to be £14 in the UK, about $18.

    • @Skyl3t0n
      @Skyl3t0n 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Gazer75 Wtf. The standard 20 pack here in Germany is 8 Euros now.
      It was 5 a couple years ago.
      BUT 40 AUD??

    • @heatherwardell2501
      @heatherwardell2501 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, around $40 and a lot of poor people still smoke! That's probably why they're poor - poor choices

    • @duncancallum
      @duncancallum 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Skyl3t0n Also twice a year there is a special Tax levied against cigarettes, so through time they will be far too dear to smoke, which the Government wants. No complaint from me i thank goodness gave up 19 years ago.

  • @SayWhaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat
    @SayWhaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    We in north europe pay 6,98% from our salary every month to health care system. So if your salary is low you pay ~ 60euros per month. So 720 euros per year for people who get minimal wage. And you get free surgeries and so on.

  • @markopolo1271
    @markopolo1271 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    As a disabled Englishman who's had quite alotta medical issues throughout my life the NHS might be a little funky but I doubt I'd even be alive today if not for them and if it was a system like the US my mother wouldn't even have been able to pay for my operations

    • @EatingMachine23
      @EatingMachine23 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      As a fellow Englishman I am so glad we have a system where we all pay into the pot so those that need it can get treatment. If I paid in for 40 years but never used a single service (completely unrealistic scenario) I would still be happy with the taxes I had contribute. If I am lucky enough to have good health in that time then I am not worried that I did not ‘get my moneys worth’ I am just thankful to be well. If I end up ill/disabled etc then I am grateful that there is a system already paid for to help me through that. Sorry for the long rambling reply. I wish you all the best mate

  • @amandajb2024
    @amandajb2024 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

    When he said kindergarten, he meant pre-school / day care. Also, cigarettes are now about $40 a pack in Australia. Thankfully, most people don’t smoke these days.

    • @Outmind01
      @Outmind01 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      If that doesn't make you want to give up smoking, then nothing will.

    • @valfar9999
      @valfar9999 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But vaping is going to get banned and people will smoke again
      Or turn to the black market

    • @ricardoxavier827
      @ricardoxavier827 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The main issue of USA is that USA constitution allows states to block the other states from creating a universal free health care system.
      In EU that blocks dont exist, and some EU members have it more and others have it less, because EU constitution allows members freedom on that.
      As while USA dont reform their constitution and political system to become a true democracy, with multiparty system by proportional vote representation, abolishing the crime of the winner takes all the seats, nothing will change.
      USA are a 2 party system dictatorship,, 2 elected wings full controled by the same not elected super rich eagle group, forever perpectuated in power by the winner takes it all, knowing that no political party borns big to win elections to win it all...
      It doenst matter if you have chronic liberal states, when the others states can actualy block that liberal states to be able to social-economic evolution like we have here in EU.
      EU institutions has no legal power to define states health care systems.
      And thats the window all USA citizens should target to allow states independence on health care systems, against the will of chronic republican states..,.,.,..,.,.,.,.

    • @duncancallum
      @duncancallum 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      25 grams of loose tobacco in Australia cost $50.00 now and goes up twice a year till it will be impossible to afford cigarettes.

    • @leisen9679
      @leisen9679 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      And yet, Australia is one of the worst offenders in climate change and that also comes with a huge cost. I think the cost of drought, forest fire and flooding paid by Australians outweighs the cost of smoking-related costs by far. So, basically all governments (not only Australian) use smokers as scape goats, while citizens inhalate car fumes and residues from bush/forest fires. Great job!😅

  • @listerofsmegv987pevinaek5
    @listerofsmegv987pevinaek5 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I paid my taxes for nearly thirty years before I needed help. Two heart attacks, by pass surgery. In the last twenty years, I've been in and out of hospital with bladder cancer. Here, my only worry is how quickly I can get back to normal. Never once did I have to think about a bill. I, the US, I would probably be dead. My wife has also had health problems, brain surgery for a tumour, cancer, the brain surgery alone would of bankrupted us great video.

  • @robwhythe793
    @robwhythe793 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +49

    I'm English. My (Canadian) wife has been in an NHS hospital for the last three months after an horrendous mistake made by another driver. If we were living here it would be free, but we're going to have to claim the cost off the driver's insurance. So I've been a hospital visitor twice a day for that whole period, and I've seen two things:
    (1) The care she has received has been exemplary, and she is recovering well.
    But (2) the hospital is being run on a shoestring, costs cut to the bone, with staff demoralised, equipment failing and not being repaired or replaced.
    I remember back before the 1970's when the NHS was a fantastic organisation, something people were proud to work for. Now they are taken advantage of by the government, with wage rises well below inflation over decades. Many of the shops and restaurants near the hospital give big discounts to NHS staff - a fantastic gesture by them, but one which shows how everyone recognises they are doing a fantastic job but are not paid enough for it. I am proud of the NHS, very proud. But ashamed that the main public gents' toilet has been roped off, out of action, more times than not over the last three months; that the internet connection through the public wifi system was broken for about 4 days and nobody fixed it, despite it being reported many, many times. (I know, because I reported it myself, and stood over one of the nurses while she tried to persuade them to fix it.)
    The government (Conservative, for the past 13 years or more) are to blame. I think many of our politicians have a vested interest in making it fail, because they have big investments in private healthcare companies. The people at large love the NHS, and the biggest promise those in favour of Brexit could make, to induce the British people to self-harm, was to give the NHS extra money if they did. Even in its weakened, mismanaged, failing state, we still want it.

    • @andrewmcewan8081
      @andrewmcewan8081 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      the tory's always run the nhs down when they get into office . then once its struggleing they can use that to introduce american style changes .

    • @kravan5063
      @kravan5063 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      The NHS has had more funding then it ever has had.
      The issue isn't funding, the issue is efficiency and an unsustainable amount of immigration

    • @andrewmcewan8081
      @andrewmcewan8081 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@kravan5063 without the immigration the NHS wouldn't exist

    • @robwhythe793
      @robwhythe793 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@kravan5063 No, immigration is not the issue. But you're right, efficiency is. For instance, I've seen ambulances unable to move a new patient into hospital because there are no beds available - meaning that the ambulance is used as a spare hospital bed for a while, and cannot do the job it is designed for. Equally, I saw my own wife bed-blocking for at least a week simply because they couldn't find anywhere for her for intermediate care and could not discharge her until they knew she would be properly cared for.
      Immigration is not a problem. Immigrants do jobs that we can't fill any other way. Immigrants pay tax just like you and me. Immigrants have worked hard to get where they are, and are very grateful to be accepted and integrated. I know that for a fact because I am an immigrant to Canada. Immigration is NOT a problem. Please don't believe those who say it is.
      And be proud of your NHS. I am. I just want it to work properly, rather than being strangled by red tape and lack of resources, as it is at the moment.

    • @kravan5063
      @kravan5063 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@robwhythe793 I'm sorry but you're just simply incorrect. Our immigration levels have been outpacing our construction rate for houses, expansion of services and so on.
      You cannot simply sit there and tell me that millions of additional people into a country over a relatively short period of time isn't going to have any effect on its social systems. That is an incredibly illogical thing to say. I feel as if the reason you're saying that is due to a kneejerk reaction because you suspect I'm some troglodyte who is using immigrants as a scape goat. I'm not at all.
      Immigration brings benefits, but it also has drawbacks. And again, we're talking MASS immigration over DECADES.
      Some things also can't be solved by simply money. Land space is a good example of that with regards to housing.
      Mass immigration has had a direct negative effect on the NHS, Canada's system as well as other European countries.

  • @rggot2relax
    @rggot2relax 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I live in The Netherhands and I have to say I'm happy I do. I think our system is way better then the American one. I was shocked to hear you pay a thousand dollars a month and people go broke over a broken leg. We pay about 200 Euro's a month for a standard package. Also we get help if there's something wrong. I had a gastric bypass that didn't cost me anything but in the long run it wil save a lot of medical bills. In holland even if you're not insured they will help you and figure it out later. And then there's the biggest fact in my opinion. In America the difference between rich and poor means healthy or not. That's just wrong.

  • @oldtimer7635
    @oldtimer7635 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    3:00 Sorry, but your constant interruptions made me go and get the original video...bye bye. ; )

    • @group555_
      @group555_ 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Why the fuck are you watching the reaction version if you don't want to see the reactions

  • @briansmith6791
    @briansmith6791 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    To some degree as you want to fit in with societal norms. When all your friends are healthy and active, your afternoon on the couch eating chicken wings and beer, changes to a hike through nature, because that's where everyone is. So, you become a proponent of your own health and hence your countrys' healthcare.

  • @Kris1964
    @Kris1964 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Europe is somewhere in the middle between asia and the us in terms of individualism and collectivism

  • @PepsiMaGs
    @PepsiMaGs 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Arrived home from the hospital yesterday. Got half of my thyroid gland removed and it is now checked for “abnormal cells”. I had the procedure on Thursday, was hospitalized until Friday and sent home with paracetamol as pain killers. All I had to pay (yes, I pay my taxes happily) was the painkillers, appr. USD4. I live in Denmark and am so happy I do.
    The reason it’s a good idea to remove the jumbo size sodas from the stores is that you might be more prone to buy the larger one because of convenience, price etc. And then you of course drink it all. If your only option is to buy a bottle up to half the size you are not in the same way “tricked” to buy that large amount of unhealthy, sugary soda. Bottom Line: healthier people. Juuust like when you compare menu sizes at eg. McDonalds and look at the public obesity level.

  • @WallySketch
    @WallySketch 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    This video is extremely biased. Half of the video's logic is "X didn't work once, so there is no solution". But they seem to completely forget one simple fact. There are Private Health Insurances currently working in the USA. Not only working, but making profit. So not only Public Healthcare would work, but it would also be cheaper because they don't need to make profit.
    All those things about making the population healthier arrived way later than public healthcare in France, and most of them were decided by the European Union not the country itself.

  • @Kythera1976
    @Kythera1976 39 นาทีที่ผ่านมา

    The biggest obstacle I see with a universal healthcare system in the US (as a Canadian) is the fact the current system is for profit. Between the hospital, doctors, and treatment methods, then the prescription medication companies allowing people to go bankrupt over INSULIN (which the Canadian inventor did not patent because he felt it belonged to the world!!!), and the all the people involved with health insurance, i can't see how it would be possible.

  • @rikulappi9664
    @rikulappi9664 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Finland here. Banning large containers of unhealthy stuff - NO! Taxing unhealthy stuff - YES. Buying a volume of an alcohol product in single small containers is never more expensive than buying the same volume as a family pack / big container - YES.

  • @wertyghg5132
    @wertyghg5132 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    While Americans often place individual freedom above all else and in Asia often place average wealth above all else, Europe has discovered an interesting third possibility: The focus is on the opportunities and prosperity of the individual; you may not have all the freedoms, but you have the opportunity to achieve and expand them, so to speak, the opportunity for the opportunity. Davei will also help you discover new opportunities if you experience failure

  • @marybee1594
    @marybee1594 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Slovenia land of your ex first lady covers all health care, for any need, even surgical for 35 eur /month, for strangers, not free but, nothing abnormaly expencive.

  • @glennstach4439
    @glennstach4439 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The monies States have made from Cannabis could be used to finance a large amount towards HEALTH CARE SERVICES !!!!!!! LIKE you said , IGNORANCE RULES !!! 🌲🍁🌻🇺🇦💛💙

  • @RobertHoward-k8r
    @RobertHoward-k8r 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Next time you drive past the cemetery check out all the healthy residents

  • @madams2312
    @madams2312 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Our national insurance is around 13% of our salary and a percentage goes to fund the NHS, 13% is a lot lower than the cost of medical insurance in the USA

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      And that pays for the state pension to. Something else Americans don't get.

    • @madams2312
      @madams2312 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @101steel4 wow didn't Americans miss out on that aswell

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@madams2312 yes no pension either, that's why you see them still working into their 80s+.
      Freedom 🙄

  • @davidjacobs7465
    @davidjacobs7465 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I am a simpleton, so I thought it could work if half the taxes of military spending in the US would be redistributed (that would still leave around $400 BILLION anual spending on military). The other $400 BILLION can go to healthcare, schooling, nature... pretty much everything. And I remember a video of some sort stating if this hypothetical scenario were to happen in the US that there STILL would be money left to give back each tax payer while everything was actually sorted out.

    • @pattycake427
      @pattycake427 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Our military budget is why so many countries are able to have a lower military budget. Are you in support for decreasing our presence in allied countries so they have to increase their budgets? It's an interesting conversation, would they still be able to afford these systems?

    • @xfranczeskax
      @xfranczeskax 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Are you asking whether we are in for a new round of global demilitarization? Heck yeah! On a more serious note: America has strategically built those dependencies. It really is a interesting conversation because gaining back more freedom of America probably would lead to a bad spiral: remilitarization equal less money for social problems equal destabilization in said countries. :/ The US sure was smart. Only at the cost of their own social system. @@pattycake427

    • @valsyaranamual6853
      @valsyaranamual6853 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Exactly! NATO and is also the reason Russia attacked Ukraine. After WW2 Russia and US made a pact -Russia to abolish Warsaw Pact-US abolish NATO and not surround Russia with NATO Bases.Guess what,America lied. And Ukraine asked for a NATO Base. Your presence in allied countries is basically an occupation of their country, isn't it?Took UK from 1945 -2006 to pay US for their "help" in WW2.Their "help" only came after Pearl Harbour,refused until they were attacked,same WW1.But scream out for allies to join them when they start wars!

    • @barriehull7076
      @barriehull7076 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@pattycake427 Who in their right mind would want to invade the US anyway.

    • @ampersand.
      @ampersand. 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@pattycake427 The American military budget is there to enrich US armament corporations - the vast MIC. This is why America`s forever blowing up countries and threatening others.

  • @90Pekkis
    @90Pekkis 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I get brain aneurysms every time Ryan opens his mouth.

    • @eaglevision993
      @eaglevision993 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Well then I hope you don´t live in the US. It might get pricy.

    • @carolfletcher9939
      @carolfletcher9939 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@eaglevision993that's brilliant! 😂😂😂

  • @feha92
    @feha92 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    To answer some of your questions:
    No, I do not think I want to be healthy to lower the cost on society. But I _do_ think stuff like how I want to recycle well to help it, and don't litter (and even pick up other's litter if it is an easy piece that isn't slimy and I can throw it soon enough or have a free bag), etc.
    The bottle thing sounds stupid. Not because it is a bad idea to limit the intake of unhealthy products. But because the reason one buys such a large bottle would never be because it is your portion-size. It would obviously be because you either wanted the cheapest alternative for months worth of something with a long shelf-life, or needed it for a party.
    Banning it is entirely unrelated to people's health, because that is not how people use those sizes. Had it however been about banning "supersized" portions of fast food at fast-food restaurants? That could've made _way_ more sense. Unless the intention is clearly to offer a doggybag to take home the rest (like how pizzas are sized for two portions, and you are meant to take home the other half and store it in the fridge for tomorrow morning - when you are hungover).

  • @samshort365
    @samshort365 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    At the end of the day I REALLY DONT CARE what Americans think. At least I don't lose any sleep concerned that my family may face bankruptcy due to health concerns.