With all due respect, did you even look at the program?
Let's take one of the examples highlighted in the program, Japan. The Japanese have better health than us and spend half as much as us, only 8% GDP. Certainly, their better health is due in part to lifestyle issues, but they do have the highest life expectancy and lowest infant mortality rates in the world. Their healthcare system has a lot to do with that.
In Japan, they utillize a "social insurance" program. All citizens are required to have health insurance. Usually, it is provided (at least in part) by their employer. If they don't have insurance through their employer, they must purchase it from a non-profit, community-based plan. If they can't afford to buy it, the government helps pay the premiums. Not really all that different from the U.S., except for the fact that the insurers there are all non-profit. Insurance companies cannot make a profit, and they cannot turn anyone down for any reason.
But before you go railing against Japan's "socialized medicine", note that Japan's healthcare is NOT socialist. 80% of the hospitals in Japan are private, which is more than in this country. And virtually all doctors offices are private businesses.
As for your pride in getting an MRI the same day a doctor prescribes it (which, of course, is not necessarily true for everybody in this country), in Japan there are no gatekeepers, which means you can see any doctor or any specialist you want at any time. And you don't need an appointment -- ever. There is no wait. None. You can see a doctor of any kind and get whatever testing you want whenever you want.
The Japanese get twice as many MRIs per capita as Americans. They love them. They get them all the time. And they're incredibly cheap: in the United States, an MRI can run you somewhere around $1200. In Japan, it's $98. Ninety-eight freaking dollars.
What about a night in the hospital? If you want a private room, a night in the hospital will cost you a mere $90. If you don't mind a multi-occupancy room (4 per room), you pay just $10 per night. Anybody have any idea how much a night in the hospital here is?
And the Japanese are extremely satisfied with their healthcare.
Are there problems with this system? Of course. Doctors and hospitals are extremely underpaid, due to price controls instituted by the government. Some hospitals find it hard to stay in business with these prices. Some people believe Japan doesn't spend enough on healthcare. Imagine that.
Does the government "run" their healthcare? Of course not. They control prices and they provide assistance for the poor.
This is just Japan. Four other countries are highlighted in that documentary. All four provide universal coverage. Most utilize private, not socialist or government-run healthcare. All have excellent healthcare -- at least comparable to America. None require you to wait 9 months for an MRI. All spend considerably less on healthcare than we do.
The conversation runs far deeper than "My healthcare is better than yours and I don't have to wait 9 months for an MRI."