Why Compare?
Many of the people who read this blog are likely from the United States, and while it’s easy to focus on the challenges we see here, it’s important to recognize that people in other countries often face very different, sometimes more severe, healthcare struggles. At the same time, the U.S. itself isn’t in the best shape when it comes to medical access and equity.
By looking at both domestic and international health disparities, we can better understand how widespread these issues are. Learning about the healthcare situations in other countries not only broadens our perspective but also helps us recognize warning signs, take action in our own communities, and support those living in underserved areas around the world.

Domestic Issues Vs. International Issue
Domestic health issues in the United States go beyond common illnesses like the flu or a cold. Many communities, especially rural and underfunded areas, face limited access to quality healthcare, high medical costs, and disparities in treatment. In fact, over one-third of rural Americans report skipping needed medical care because of cost, a rate more than twice as high as in many comparable countries. Rural areas also have fewer providers, with only about 39.8 physicians per 100,000 people compared to 53.3 in urban areas. These shortages contribute to worse health outcomes, including higher mortality, cardiovascular disease, and infant mortality rates among rural populations. In the U.S., the core issue is often not the absence of advanced technology or medicines, but rather affordability, insurance complexity, and systemic inequities that prevent people from accessing care.
International health issues, by contrast, frequently stem from the absence of even basic infrastructure and medical resources. Globally, 2.1 billion people still lack safely managed drinking water services, and unsafe water, sanitation, and hygiene caused 1.4 million deaths in 2019 alone. Diseases like malaria, tuberculosis, and cholera remain widespread in many regions, where access to hospitals, clinics, and trained health professionals is extremely limited. While Americans may worry about paying for insulin or navigating complex insurance plans, people in many low-income countries may worry about whether they can find any medicine or a trained doctor at all.
Vaccination highlights another contrast: in the U.S., coverage is generally high but uneven due to pockets of vaccine hesitancy, while globally, immunization efforts have prevented at least 154 million deaths over the past 50 years. COVID-19 revealed both kinds of vulnerabilities. This showed how U.S. hospitals struggled with surge capacity, costs, and equity, while many countries around the world struggled with disrupted supply chains, lack of vaccines, and already fragile healthcare systems.
The key difference lies in the nature of the barriers: in the United States, the challenge is affordability and equity within a highly advanced but uneven system, while internationally the challenge is gaining access to the most basic healthcare resources. Both reveal the urgent need to address health disparities at every level.
Warning signs
Domestic Warning Signs:
- More people skipping medical care because of cost or lack of insurance
- Shortages of doctors, nurses, or hospitals in rural areas
- Rising gaps in health outcomes between rural and urban communities
- Increasing medical debt and bankruptcies from healthcare costs
- Declining vaccination rates in some regions
International Warning Signs:
- Healthcare systems disrupted by poverty, conflict, or weak infrastructure
- Populations lacking access to clean water or sanitation, leading to disease outbreaks
- High maternal and infant mortality rates
- Shortages of essential medicines, vaccines, and trained health workers
- Frequent outbreaks of preventable infectious diseases like malaria or cholera

How to take action
Educate yourself and others: Stay informed and share knowledge to raise awareness about health disparities.
Advocate for change: Support policies that improve healthcare access, equity, and funding.
Volunteer your time: Help at local clinics, food banks, health education programs, or global aid initiatives.
Fundraise or donate: Contribute to organizations working to improve healthcare access and resources.
Use your voice: Write, blog, or present about health issues to inspire others to get involved.
Promote healthy living: Encourage preventive care, wellness, and good hygiene practices in your community and beyond.
How to support those living in underserved areas
Expand access: Support initiatives that bring mobile clinics, Telehealth, or transportation to care.
Provide resources: Donate to programs that supply medicine, food, clean water, or hygiene products.
Promote education: Volunteer in schools or health education programs that teach preventive care and wellness.
Advocate for equity: Push for policies that fund rural hospitals, community health centers, and affordable care.
Build awareness: Use platforms like blogs, social media, or community events to highlight the challenges these areas face.
Partner locally: Work with community organizations that already have strong connections and know the specific needs.


