US is raging about private health insurance trap. We shouldn’t fall into it

The American healthcare crisis should alert us to the dangers of replicating the US model wherein commercial entities mould policy to prioritise private profits over public welfare

The concept of insurance is based on an attractive idea: you pay a small amount of money regularly, and if and when disaster strikes, you will receive protection from catastrophic expenses. But ask anyone who has experienced insurance as it operates today, especially health insurance managed by private companies, it is likely they will describe back-breaking ordeals to get that ‘protection’ despite what the company earnestly promises in ads.
In the US, where commercial insurance dominates healthcare funding, these individual ordeals coalesced into an ocean of discontent earlier this month following the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
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