What's Happening?
The Commonwealth Fund's 2026 report card on U.S. healthcare highlights significant shortcomings compared to other wealthy nations. Despite spending 18% of its economy on healthcare, the U.S. achieves poor results, with life expectancy below peers and
high rates of preventable deaths. The report grades coverage, affordability, delivery of care, and equity, with the U.S. failing or nearly failing in each area. The country lacks guaranteed coverage for all, with 27 million uninsured Americans. The report also criticizes the U.S. for having the fewest primary care doctors per capita and high maternal mortality rates among Black women. Internationally, the U.S. has reduced its role in global health aid, leading to projected increases in preventable deaths worldwide.
Why It's Important?
The report underscores the inefficiencies and inequities in the U.S. healthcare system, which spends more than any other nation but fails to deliver comparable outcomes. The lack of universal coverage and insufficient primary care access contribute to poor health metrics. The reduction in global health aid further impacts international disease prevention efforts, potentially leading to millions of preventable deaths. These findings highlight the need for systemic reforms to improve healthcare access and quality domestically and restore the U.S.'s leadership role in global health initiatives.
What's Next?
The report suggests that recent and proposed federal changes could leave 17 million more Americans uninsured by 2034, reversing progress made by the Affordable Care Act. This could result in tens of thousands of additional preventable deaths annually. Internationally, the U.S.'s withdrawal from global health efforts may continue to exacerbate health crises abroad. Policymakers face pressure to address these issues and implement reforms to improve healthcare access and outcomes both domestically and globally.











