Erm, what?
Total Number of All U.S. Registered Hospitals: 5,754
...
Number of State and Local Government Community Hospitals: 1,068
...
Number of Federal Government Hospitals: 213
Those are the major categories of public hospitals I can see in there. Including the ones that are probably public (Psychiatric Hospitals, Long Term Care and Hospital Units of Institutions) you still only get up to 1,837 public hospitals out of those 5,754. I make that 32%, not 90%.
Not really inspiring confidence in the rest of your unreferenced assertions here.
Allow me to reword that. I didn't put that quite right, sorry.
As of 1910, 90% of hospitals were for-profit and non-subsidized. As of 1990, that percentage was 10%, the rest being either government owned, government subsidized and non-profit, and under extremely heavy regulations.
Seeing as medical licensing is an integral part of the medical system in America, which you've stated is the world's greatest, what exact elements of the system do you actually like, since you seem to disagree with every specific of how the system is run?
No. America's system isn't anywhere near the world's greatest. It's certainly not socialized like other countries, but it's a corporatist/fascist system that is arguably worse.
In terms of things I like, I like healthcare paid for out of pocket as of 1960, when insurance wasn't as widespread and Medicare/Medicaid didn't exist. In turn, American healthcare was extremely high quality, and yet the mess of insurance companies, subsidies, regulations on coverage, didn't exist, so it was fairly affordable (a whole discussion if you want to go that way).
Also before 1910, there were an abundance of doctor "schools" run by illiterates, which accepted students without even high school educations, and made them "doctors" in only 2 years, and the word "quack" abounded.
That wasn't the reason provided for closing many of the medical schools, though, and quackery was rapidly on its way out regardless. Not to mention, most people actually hired doctors with a good record and references, rather than Doctor Murphy, Miracle Elixir provider (for example, the high level of quality yet low cost found by mutual aid associations, who were quite discerning in who they hired).
- Canadian doctors going to America for higher wages: you implied this was a failing of the Canadian system, and a sign of success of the American system. Yet, you're also opposed to the higher wages which attracted the Canadian doctors to the USA in the first place, and your now calling it a failing of the American system.
No, no, no. That particular article was in reference to the guy claiming that doctors aren't paid well in the first world, and that they can "barely cover expenses". That was the only reason I brought it up, which I'm pretty sure I mentioned when I posted it.
Isn't part of the reason it is so good because only the rich have access to it? (Semi-serious, allready regretting asking this)
Not sure what you mean by that. Could you elaborate?