Well, like I said, every system hgas flaws, and I'm pretty sure what is shown in Sicko IS the best of the best. But about the mortality rate, and that healthcare is poor for everyone else, that does not proceed, at least not from what I've heard from some friends who actually lived there for some time. Also, respected medical papers here corroborate that the Cuban healthcare system is one of the best, and mortality rate IS pretty low, lower than Brazil and the US, as far as I can remember.
Lurtzy, I have to agree with you what Sicko shows is PROBABLY the best they have, perhaps even stretching it out a little, but that doesn't mean the "actual" reality is too worse. I still believe the movie raises a valid point, and seriously, as I said before, Public Healthcare in Brazil sucks, so to speak, but if a guy walks in the ER with 2 missing fingers, the doctors won't presente him with a choice of "Which one can you pay for?".
You can ask my fellow brazilians, I'll level with you. If a certain medicine is not within the Public Healthcare System's list, the government denies it, and you have to sue the government to get it, but once you do, you DO get it, no matter HOW MUCH it costs and if it is or not experimental (of course, provided there is no cheaper alternative with the exact same result, then you get the cheaper one). Of course, the government attorneys always say that "If we keep paying for this, we'll bankrupt the State, blah blah blah", but the best response I've heard so far was from one of my teachers, who happens to be a Judge (and so, gives away sentences contrary to the government as such): "They always say we are going to bankrupt the State. So far, I've NEVER seen or read, in all of our history, about the State ACTUALLY bankrupting over this, so, screw that, it's in the Constitution, they'd better abide by it!".