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on the one hand - my wife and i didn't have insurance when my oldest was born, as i was doing contractor work overseas. Between one thing and another over the course of that year, we paid like $8k in medical expenses, including all the obgyn visits and the actual delivery, plus a hernia repair for me. The hospital was very easy to work with. Our income was very high so it was not exactly a burden. (8k was about 2% of total salary)
on the other hand - this year, with insurance we're going to pay about $6k in insurance premiums and $8k in medical expenses before we hit our deductible (~7% of total salary)
on the gripping hand - last year we had really excellent insurance. we paid a total of $1200 for the year in premiums, $50/pay period, and our deductible was only $2k. (~1% of total salary)
So it definitely varies a lot
First world countries spend like $6,000 - $8,000 per person on care for better outcomes. The US pays more in employer subsidies and premiums than other countries pay altogether for medical care, and they don't have to worry about it at the point of service.
thanks for explaining things i already know, and that have no fucking bearing on the question OP asked.
this isn't "whose health care experience is better and less costly" - the question was "what does US health care cost", which is the question i answered.
You left out the absolutely massive amount of costs hidden by employer subsidies by focusing on the point of service costs.
Also, your username checks out.