How America’s Healthcare System Got Addicted to Money

If you Walk into an American pharmacy you’ll see a wall of neatly arranged pills and bottles.
But Behind this is a system not created for healing but to profit.
For decades, Americans have been told that the villain behind their $5 trillion healthcare bill is “Big Pharma.”
Drugmakers, we’re told, bleed patients dry with their expensive pills and patent games.
Drug companies are only one layer of a much deeper problem. The real disease is how every part of the system, from hospitals to insurers to middlemen, is engineered to profit from sickness, not health.
The average American spends over $13,000 a year on healthcare which is roughly double what citizens in other wealthy nations pay.
Yet America isn’t twice as healthy. In fact, life expectancy lags behind its peers, and millions skip prescriptions because they can’t afford them.
So where does the money go? Not to doctors saving lives. Not to nurses pulling night shifts. It goes into the pockets of hospital administrators, insurance giants, and pharmacy benefit managers and those shadowy intermediaries who negotiate drug prices but somehow always make them rise.
Every link in the chain adds a fee, a markup, a “management cost.” Each insists it’s necessary. But the result is a monstrous system where a single hospital stay can ruin a family, and insulin — discovered over a century ago still costs hundreds of dollars.
Pharmaceutical executives often take the heat, but they’re not the only ones cashing in. Non-profit hospitals report billion-dollar surpluses. Insurance CEOs earn Wall Street-sized bonuses. Even data brokers who sell anonymized patient records are profiting from illness.
It’s not a healthcare system but it’s a health industry. And like any industry, it thrives when demand increases. The more people get sick, the more money flows. Prevention doesn’t pay. Cures don’t scale. Dependency does.
Every president promises to “fix” healthcare. Trump tried to cap drug prices. Biden vowed to expand coverage. Others before them tried to regulate insurers. Yet the problem remains, because you can’t reform what you refuse to name: the system itself is designed to make staying sick more profitable than getting well.
America’s healthcare isn’t broken at all but it’s perfectly designed for what it does. And what it does best which is money making.
What happens when people can’t afford to stay healthy? Anxiety rises. Depression deepens. Productivity falls. Then, ironically, the system profits again with more prescriptions for antidepressants, therapy bills, and new medical tests.
It’s a vicious cycle. Americans aren’t just patients anymore; they’re customers in an endless subscription model for survival.
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