Very true, but then vet bills run into the thousand whilst medical care is free.
For what it's worth my medical care has always been of a high standard, and I've never had to use my (free, work provided) BUPA cover.
Well, remember the official motto of the NHS: "Don't get sick!
Funny, I have Blue Cross, and they seem to have the same motto.
Do YOU happen to have one of those plans that encourages you to get sick? 
Good thing the US health care system treats clients so much better than pets...
Humanity
hammers
As the WSJ reports:
In the last few years, I have had the opportunity to compare the human and veterinary health services of Great Britain, and on the whole it is better to be a dog.
As a British dog, you get to choose (through an intermediary, I admit) your veterinarian. If you don't like him, you can pick up your leash and go elsewhere, that very day if necessary. Any vet will see you straight away, there is no delay in such investigations as you may need, and treatment is immediate. There are no waiting lists for dogs, no operations postponed because something more important has come up, no appalling stories of dogs being made to wait for years because other dogsor hamsterscome first.
The conditions in which you receive your treatment are much more pleasant than British humans have to endure. For one thing, there is no bureaucracy to be negotiated with the skill of a white-water canoeist; above all, the atmosphere is different. There is no tension, no feeling that one more patient will bring the whole system to the point of collapse, and all the staff go off with nervous breakdowns. In the waiting rooms, a perfect calm reigns; the patients' relatives are not on the verge of hysteria, and do not suspect that the system is cheating their loved one, for economic reasons, of the treatment which he needs.