The U.S. has world‑class clinicians and science, yet no shared definition of what a better health system looks like—or how to get there. Reform stalls because incentives clash, the data is noisy, and every dollar of waste removed is a dollar someone used to receive.
We have the horsepower. NIH is the world’s largest public funder, U.S. universities dominate clinical-medicine rankings, over half of new medicines launch here first, and Americans are less likely to die of cancer than Europeans. Yet despite that firepower, our system still ranks 48th in overall health outcomes, behind countries like Slovenia (#16), Chile (#33), and Albania (#36).
The North Star gives the nation a single, unambiguous goal and a common language to align policy, purchasing, and practice.