I'm not going to disagree that its expensive but I'm not going to say that it is low quantity or low quality.
If the US does worse on population health statistics than other countries do it is not the fault of our healthcare system but rather the fault of social determinants of health such as social disconnection, inequality, etc.
> If the US does worse on population health statistics than other countries do it is not the fault of our healthcare system but rather the fault of social determinants of health such as social disconnection, inequality, etc.
No, you pay for those. Via your premiums.
(Which your employer may pay a significant part of. That's ultimately lost salary to you; it isn't out of charity on their part either.)
My family health insurance costs $3k/month. Going up ~10% next month, too.