America's healthcare report card is a simple, public scorecard for how well our health system actually works. The goal: outcomes up, waste down, equity built‑in.
(5-factor algorithm)
Out of 183
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(as a percentage of GDP)
Out of 183
Countries
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America spends more on healthcare than any nation, yet too many families still struggle to find care that is timely, affordable, and effective. The conversation is noisy and technical, and the public can’t easily tell whether we’re getting healthier, or just paying more.
The Ten Ten Ten index is a straightforward public scorecard that shows whether the U.S. is genuinely progressing toward three clear goals: better outcomes, lower costs, and consistent annual progress. It’s designed to be easily understood by everyone and used by leaders to take action.
Health: Are people getting healthier? Today, we’re assessing five categories: life expectancy, healthy life expectancy, maternal mortality, under-5 mortality, probability of premature mortality from NCDs (noncommunicable diseases), ages 30–70. In short: our goal is to live longer and better.
Value: Are we getting value for what we spend? We track what the country spends on healthcare as a share of the economy and spotlight wasteful, low‑value use. In short: we want to pay less for better results.
Trend: Are we heading in the right direction? Year-over-year trends are important. We highlight what is improving and penalize what is not. In short: momentum, regardless of its direction, must be visible and shareable.
Clarity and accountability. A single, transparent score keeps leaders honest and focused on what counts: health, value, and fairness.
Action, not just awareness. Every measurement links to practical playbooks so employers, clinicians, health plans, and policymakers can use what works.
Equity by design (roadmap). We will publish stratified results by race/ethnicity, gender, disability, income, and geography, so progress is shared, and gaps close.

Our baseline national Index and public dashboards are planned for April 2026. From there, we’ll refresh regularly and showcase organizations and communities that move the numbers.
Federal/public datasets (e.g., national expenditures, mortality/outcomes, price transparency), multi‑payer claims, clinical registries, and credible survey/PROMs.
We welcome de‑identified data feeds and validation partners.
Code, data dictionaries, and version notes are posted for replication.
External advisors audit methods; comments are logged and addressed in release notes.
Annual major release (vY.0): refreshed benchmarks, weights if needed, and national/state dashboards.
Quarterly minor updates (vY.Q): data refreshes where available and bug fixes.
Measures are versioned; final v1.0 list publishes with metadata: definition,denominator, exclusions, data source, refresh cadence.
(payment reform, transparency, administrative simplification)