this post was submitted on 12 Apr 2026
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As Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum moves forward with a plan to enact universal healthcare for her country’s more than 130 million people, a longtime advocate for Medicare for All in the US called the development “both inspiring and frustrating.”

“Inspiring because it shows what is possible,” Wendell Potter, a former insurance company communications director who has become a leading critic of the industry, told Common Dreams. “Frustrating because here in the US we are going in the opposite direction.”

Earlier this week, Sheinbaum announced a decree that she called “a historic step” for Mexico.

Beginning in 2027, her government plans to unify Mexico’s public health institutions into a single Universal Health Service, allowing patients across the country to receive care from the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS), the Social Security Institute and Social Services of Workers of the State (ISSSTE), and the IMSS‑Bienestar program, which provides free services to those without employer-provided insurance.

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[–] cybervseas@lemmy.world 7 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

So when is Mexico going to start having death panels? /s

[–] wieson@feddit.org 1 points 2 weeks ago

I've seen so many tiktoks about this by Us-americans, that are generally to the tune of "even Mexico can do this, why can't we". Which is a good sentiment kinda, but the vibe of soo many of them just gave me acid reflux.

Like, it was known that universal healthcare is possible, viable, financially and morally smart and good. There are so many countries practicing it for over 100 years.

But only when the "oh so poor" Mexicans get it, it starts to click?!

I don't know. Maybe my vibe-o-meter is off, but I don't think so.