Do you have non-ACA insurance? One explanation for why your costs are so much higher than the national average is that you're on a non-complying plan (you can also still buy plans that will exclude preexisting conditions --- they just can't be sold on the ACA marketplace). I'm pretty confident KFF isn't making these numbers up.
As for your second question, one easy response is that prospective parents in other health care systems aren't paying less (with everything factored in) but rather differently: that people making your $119k "true" poverty rate in Europe tend to be taxed at their top marginal rate, which is substantially higher than ours (in fact, in a lot of places in Europe, a Chicago Public School teacher would also be paying the top marginal rate).
A thing worth pointing out is that while the system we have is especially punishing on the uninsured, it's actually not that bad a deal for the insured, demographically/actuarially speaking. That's because being insured definitionally puts you in the cohort that excludes Medicaid-eligible poor/working class people and fixed-income seniors. If you move the typical household from that cohort to the UK, they're likely to be worse off. In surveys, insured families tend to be satisfied with their insurance, which is why taking existing health insurance off the table is such a third rail in American health policy.
Anyways, unless you personally are responsible for keeping our population above replacement level (which sounds exhausting), your numbers just aren't probative for the cost of bringing new citizens online. Other numbers might be!
While I might not have been happier income-wise when I was on Medicaid vs now, I was much happier with my medicaid insurance than I have ever been with any private insurance. I could see basically any provider and didn’t have to deal with any of the typical insurance bullshit.
Also when you’re beyond the Medicaid threshold but not that much beyond it absolutely sucks. One year I was paying for dramatically worse insurance with a deductible that would have just made it better for me to just not make more money because if I hit that deductible I would be net negative on my income vs the threshold for Medicaid.
Also I think this is such a false premise. You can still have private plans if you want in the UK or elsewhere with a public health system. Nobody is forcing you to use the public system if you don’t want to. To wit, I don’t have children but I still pay for schools with my taxes. You might not want to use the public health system and instead go private, but yes, you should still be paying for a freely accessible healthcare system.
Here’s the rub on that too: The prices we pay here are so much higher than in Europe even if you go private in those countries. Our system is terrible. Point blank.
I would agree that the NHS in the UK has gotten pretty bad. A large part of that is the result of the Tory government actively working against it though for a very long time. The waitlists for a lot of things are quite long and my fiancé who is from the UK and still lives there has to do some things there are crazy to me. On the other hand she still is able to get care freely. She’s paid private for some dental work but that also cost her pennies on the dollar compared to what I’d be paying if I did the same thing here.
If you’re happy with your insurance I am truly thrilled for you because I don’t think of that as being a common experience.
> Do you have non-ACA insurance? One explanation for why your costs are so much higher than the national average is that you're on a non-complying plan (you can also still buy plans that will exclude preexisting conditions --- they just can't be sold on the ACA marketplace). I'm pretty confident KFF isn't making these numbers up.
Asked and answered in the piece dude - I wish I had the confidence of a Hacker News commenter who didn't read the article.