The OP's question has been answered, so I'll do my bit to further derail his thread. Further to the "socialism" theme, I've put on my Nomex coveralls from a job earlier in my career in anticipation of some of the responses.
Before I worked in the US for a few years earlier this decade I had wondered why it was that the US ranks poorly in average life expectancy (37th in the world in 2019) yet overspends every other country. Here's my take on it.
In countries with universal healthcare, healthcare is a
service funded by taxpayers. Erase that image in your head about some bleak East German communist era building. The health care facilities in Canada, Norway, Australia, etc. look the same as those in the US (except for those servicing the very rich) and provide the same excellent care. There are problems, just different ones to the US model.
In the US, healthcare is an
industry. A really big, but inefficient industry, without the normal capitalist market forces of supply and demand to drive prices down. Not many people shop around to get the best deal on their chemotherapy.
The "user pay" model seems to be great for the rich, who can use
their money to fund
their healthcare. For everyone else, not so much. For those of you in the US, why is there such a dislike of socialized medicine, the model used in all countries that consistently rank as the best to live in?
Chris