https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/health-spending-u-s-compare-countries
In 2005 I was without insurance and needed it. I hadn't yet seen a health provider to figure out what was wrong, so I was able to get insurance despite having what turned out to be a serious, pre-existing condition, but it was agony until I finally got surgery for a herniated disc.
One company refused to cover me because my wife was of child-bearing age, due to some contingency where they could end up being responsible for her; I explained that they already covered her--she was enrolled in an individual plan with them that included maternity coverage; they didn't care.
Anyway, I like to do business with companies that provide health coverage to their employees. Starbucks even offers coverage to part-timers. When uninsured people forego preventative care and end up on dialysis, use the emergency dept for primary care, or file for medical bankruptcy (most common cause of personal bankruptcy) because they can't pay their hospital bill, we all pay the exorbitant costs--one reason the US spends far more per capita than other developed countries, including those with universal coverage (single-payer or otherwise).
I know fiscal conservatism is gone (if it was ever real), but an ounce of prevention achieved by fixing this broken system would yield a pound of cure in savings when people reach Medicare age; e.g., dialysis costs $90,000/year per patient for a total cost to Medicare of $28,000,000,000 annually.