Can't speak for Australia but off the top of my head, we gave the world penicillin which saved millions of lives in WWII. Oh and these Australian teens recreated Daraprim in their school laboratory.
"The Sydney Grammar boys, all 17, synthesised the active ingredient, pyrimethamine, in their school science laboratory.
"It wasn't terribly hard but that's really the point, I think, because we're high school students," one boy, Charles Jameson, told the BBC.
The students produced 3.7 grams of pyrimethamine for $20. In the US, the same quantity would cost up to $110,000.
In most countries, including Australia and Britain, the drug retails for less than $1.50 per pill."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-38153254
lay out your case for why it cant work in the US cock holster
We have an NHS but it is not a monopoly, there is a thriving private healthcare system as well. Many companies provide healthcare as part of the employee package.Why do liberals want monopolies
Thursday we did five total joint replacements. Patients were satisfied with their care and things were good. But when I got home I was totally spent. So myself and some others are interested in how the 'free' part works.
Because I can tell you we won't do it for free.
Yes, he runs a marijuana shop, five joints a day may not sound like much but they are two foot long!we???
No, but I get the idea they don't work like we do.
Do workers in the 'free systems' have the same incentive to produce?
republicans dont learn
they merely find new facts to deny
So, why don't we study their system and see how their Universal Coverage single payer system works and what parts of it we could incorporate into our system so we could change to be more like them. Heck if its better what do we have to lose?
Of course, Australia has free single payor healthcare. But Trump just didn't say that. If I remember correctly, he said every country has better healthcare than us.
Venezuela has better health care than what Obama saddled you losers with.
They have targets, if that's what you mean? In fact there is a lot of criticism and debate about the target driven culture.
There is also a lot of misunderstanding in the US about what free actually means. The NHS is free at the point of use, but it is funded by National Insurance as indeed is the State Pension and Unemployment Benefit. This means that there will be no talking to insurance companies, copays, long discussions about existing conditions or what type of coverage you are entitled to, because you're entitled to everything including abortion, cancer treatment, maternity, in the lot. The NHS also gets criticism for doing too much like gender realignment, fertility treatment and bariatric/cosmetic surgery.
http://www.scottishconservatives.com/2015/08/ruth-time-to-review-nhs-target-culture/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/article/10078062/why-do-we-pay-national-insurance
Money isn't the only motivator and often not the best one either...
