International perspective - takes a whole country and writes a short summary of their health system.
Uses life expectancy, percentage of GDP spent on health care, and other metrics to provide comparisons, but then gives a bit more detail about how it’s funded (e.g. taxation, privately, insurance); how it’s configured (primary/secondary); and a bit about workforce.
Acknowledges that history and political context are important, as well as cultural influences. Each section is very brief, and in my view can feel a bit over simplified.
Could be better at noting the determinants of health and the impact these will have. Sometimes feels like the author hasn't recognised the contribution that public health makes.
Might be interesting to see how things have changed since 2015. Also interesting that the author applied to be the NHS England CEO in 2019 (I think) and was unsuccessful.