A visit to the emergency room or a lengthy hospital stay won't bankrupt you.
I found this out when I broke my ankle unexpectedly and, as it was a trimalleolar fracture, it required surgery and a multiple-day hospital stay.
I stressed for much of the visit, used to the American way of receiving bills for multiple thousands of dollars that there'd be no way I could ever repay.
When I was discharged from the hospital three days after my surgery with several weeks worth of medication and a set of crutches to help me on my way, I wasn't handed a bill, nor was I sent one later. The NHS covered it all.
Prescriptions are either free or capped at £8.60.
It's an unfortunate fact that at some point in our lives, we'll all need medication, whether temporary or more long-term.
In America, if you don't have great health insurance which includes prescription coverage, purchasing drugs prescribed to you by your doctor could be crippling or even impossible.
That's not an issue in the UK, where many residents are eligible for free prescriptions and everyone else, no matter how much money they make or don't make, pays no more than £8.60 (roughly $10.85 USD).
If you're going to be on medication long-term, you can even apply for a PPC, or prescription prepayment certificate, which could save you hundreds per year.
Private healthcare is still available but not generally necessary.
There are many people in positions of power in the UK who would love to privatize the NHS and turn it into a system that operates like it does in the US, which would eliminate the aforementioned advantages of the system.
One negative aspect of the NHS is that the system is overtaxed, which sometimes results in specialist waiting lists that are lengthy. Because of these delays, many people do choose to purchase private medical insurance or pay private doctor fees out of pocket.
If this is something you're able to swing financially and are interested in, the option is always there, but it coincides with a more affordable system than the US offers.
It also affordably covers other things like dental care, physiotherapy, and sexual health services.
In the UK, birth control is free, for starters — you don't even pay the general prescription fee.
You can get your teeth cleaned at an NHS dentist for £21.60 (roughly $27.50) and emergency treatment and fillings are also available at a reduced cost. Mental health services, while admittedly still somewhat lacking in the UK at the moment, are also available on the NHS, as are women's health services like pap smears, mammograms, and more.
While the NHS is far from perfect, as an American, I've seen how hard the doctors, nurses, and other NHS staff members work on a daily basis to provide the best possible care for hundreds of thousands of patients throughout the UK on a daily basis.
The system certainly needs a lot of improvement — more government funding would be a good start — but I'm grateful for its existence on a daily basis and only wish America would get behind a similar system.
Healthcare is a right, not a privilege, and it's good to live in a country in which people (most of them, anyway) seem to be on board with that train of thought.