Honestly the US is judged "poorly" on healthcare because of two stats.
First is infant mortality rate. The US performs worse in this because the US counts all infants. While every other country disregards infants if they're born too small, or weigh to little, or are too sick.
The US counts everybody born as a person. Other countries don't.
The second is average life expectancy. Which is effected by things like the US much higher murder rate.
When it comes to life expectancies for diseases. Nobody beats the USA. As that OCED report listesd... the US is top in cardiovasculiar and cancer. The worlds two biggest killers.
If the healthcare system truley didn't reach most people... our survivial rates wouldn't be that good. Our system does reach everybody. It just costs everyone differently based on your decisions. Any talk of "treatment differences" should note that reports show that the UK has significant "treatment differences" based on wealth despite it being "universal"... because the poor are unhealthy and such things are overinflated.








