US Healthcare: Why We Spend Twice as Much for Worse Outcomes
Let me be real with you — I’ve worked in pharma for over 13 years. I’ve seen how healthcare works from the inside. And honestly? The US healthcare system is broken in ways that most people don’t fully understand.
I remember sitting in a meeting with a colleague from the UK. He told me how much he paid for his NHS coverage. I told him what I paid for my US health insurance. He couldn’t believe it.
And then I told him that we have worse outcomes.
He was shocked. So was I when I first looked at the data.
Here’s the reality.
Quick Summary: US Healthcare Spending vs Outcomes
| Metric | United States | OECD Average |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare spending (% of GDP) | 18% | 9% |
| Healthcare spending per capita | $13,000+ | $5,000-$6,000 |
| Life expectancy | 76.4 years | 80+ years |
| Infant mortality (per 1,000) | 5.4 | 3.8 |
| Maternal mortality (per 100,000) | 23.8 | 10-12 |
| Uninsured rate | ~8% | <2% |
Reference: Commonwealth Fund. “U.S. Health Care from a Global Perspective.” 2026.
The Numbers That Don’t Lie
| Country | Spending % GDP | Life Expectancy |
|---|---|---|
| United States | 18.0% | 76.4 years |
| Germany | 12.8% | 81.8 years |
| France | 12.2% | 82.9 years |
| UK | 11.3% | 81.2 years |
| Japan | 10.9% | 84.4 years |
| Australia | 10.6% | 83.1 years |
| Canada | 10.4% | 82.3 years |
What this tells us: The US spends 1.5x more than Germany, 1.6x more than France — but lives 5-6 years less. ❌
Reference: OECD. “Health at a Glance 2026.” 2026.
Why Is US Healthcare So Expensive?
1. Administrative Waste
Let me tell you what I’ve seen firsthand.
In the US, hospitals have entire departments dedicated to billing. They hire people just to argue with insurance companies. Doctors’ offices have staff who do nothing but navigate prior authorizations and claims.
How much it costs: The US spends ~$1,000 per person per year on administrative costs — compared to ~$100-200 in other countries.
What this means: That’s money that could go to actual healthcare — but instead, it goes to paperwork.
Reference: JAMA Internal Medicine. “Administrative Costs in US Healthcare.” 2024.
2. Drug Prices Are Out of Control
This one hits close to home. I’ve worked in pharma — I know how drugs are priced.
The US pays 2-3x more for the same drugs as other countries.
| Drug | US Price | UK Price |
|---|---|---|
| Humira | $7,000/month | $1,500/month |
| Insulin | $300/vial | $50/vial |
| Ozempic | $1,000/month | $200-300/month |
Why: Other countries negotiate drug prices. The US doesn’t.
Reference: RAND Corporation. “International Comparison of Drug Prices.” 2025.
3. The ER Is a Safety Net
People without insurance use the ER for basic care — which is the most expensive setting. One ER visit can cost thousands of dollars. That cost gets passed on to everyone else.
How much: An ER visit for a non-urgent issue costs ~$2,500. A primary care visit costs ~$150.
What this means: We use the most expensive care for the least urgent problems.
4. Fee-for-Service Model
Doctors get paid for doing more — not for doing better.
More tests, procedures, ore visits and MRIs. More surgeries.
What this means: The system incentivizes volume — not value.
What Happens When You’re Uninsured?
I’ve seen this firsthand. People avoid going to the doctor because they can’t afford it. By the time they go, they’re sicker — and treatment costs more.
The result:
-
Higher mortality rates
-
More ER visits
-
More bankruptcies
The US is the only developed country where medical bills are a leading cause of bankruptcy.
What Can Be Done?
| Reform | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Drug price negotiation | Allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices |
| Universal coverage | Cover everyone — reduce ER usage |
| Administrative simplification | Reduce billing complexity |
| Value-based care | Pay for outcomes — not procedures |
The Bottom Line
US healthcare is expensive because of:
-
Administrative waste
-
High drug prices
-
ER as safety net
-
Fee-for-service model
And we get worse outcomes for it.
I’ve seen this system from the inside — and it’s not about bad doctors or bad hospitals. It’s about a broken system.
The good news: We can fix it. But it takes political will, not just medical expertise.
You may also like:
📖 GLP-1 Medications: 2026’s Top Health Trend
📖 Diabetes Management in 2026
📖 Air Pollution Effects on Health
Written by Altaf Khan | MSc Chemistry, MBA, QC Manager | Medical Bluff
References
-
Commonwealth Fund. “U.S. Health Care from a Global Perspective.” 2026.
-
OECD. “Health at a Glance 2026.” 2026.
-
JAMA Internal Medicine. “Administrative Costs in US Healthcare.” 2024.
-
RAND Corporation. “International Comparison of Drug Prices.” 2025.



