I'm not convinced about this image of Sweden you've got.
Fact is, in Europe if you walked into the road and were hit by a bus, you would not have the stress you would have here. You would be fixed up, using the latest medical advances, you would be offered a hospital bed and fed three meals a day. Your employment would stop but instead of a life on the street or burdening friends or family you would be offered government housing, which would be to a very accommodating standard, perhaps a nurse would pop in to see you a few times a week, if you had further hospital appointments they would be taken care of including all the medicine that would help you on your way. During your recovery you would be taken care of on the states tab, may even receive subsidised items like food, suits, and cars. When it was time to return to work you will be assisted in finding suitable work, if you had a child in the meantime they would receive support payments, they would go to a state school that would be the envy of most non-European countries. Once you were in work you would work until 58 and then retire on a pension relevant to your last wage. You would get bus passes, nursing visits and all sorts of things old people need until the day you die.
Now, compare that with what would happen if you were hit by a bus on a high street in China, America or one of those other backwards thinking places where peoples health depends on their wealth.
In Europe the stress of stressful situations, loosing a job, loosing a limb, falling ill, looking after loved ones, supporting children is lessened by the support of the state. I suppose it's all an inconvenience until you need it, then you get back what you put in, or perhaps even more.
Even in Africa, a vast number of nations offer state health, it's not brilliant, but its better than the sweet FA they would get it if it was down to the private sector, the poor have no money so it would make no sense to look for business there. It's there as a support net when you've fallen on hard times, or if you live to a standard where you can't afford to get ill.