Agreed. Any simplistic statement like "the problem with healthcare in the US is [blank]" is evidence of someone that doesn't know very much about the many complex and interlinked issues. Likewise, someone thinking the system can be fixed by "just doing X" is also being reductionist.
The pandemic showed a number of areas in healthcare where people were generally ignorant. For example, thinking that hospitals have tons of reserve capacity to handle extraordinary events. Even well before the current situation, hospitals (community) tended to run at about 80% occupancy. Far from being a profit-consideration, even the department of Health and Human Services mandated that hospitals had to run at least 55% occupancy, or they lost benefits.
The pandemic is a bit unusual in affecting everyone at once. For a local or regional problem, staffing wouldn't be as much of an issue because workers can travel. (For example, traveling nurses.)
The pandemic showed a number of areas in healthcare where people were generally ignorant. For example, thinking that hospitals have tons of reserve capacity to handle extraordinary events. Even well before the current situation, hospitals (community) tended to run at about 80% occupancy. Far from being a profit-consideration, even the department of Health and Human Services mandated that hospitals had to run at least 55% occupancy, or they lost benefits.