Dave Barry provides an accurate description of our health care system here.  Two excerpts:
The first big breakthrough in medical knowledge was made by the ancient  Egyptians, who discovered that the human body contained organs such as  the pancreas, and if a person became sick, and you took out one or more  of these organs, the person would get better. Or not. But either way you  could charge the person, or his heirs, money. This was the beginning of  surgery....
The greatest Greek physician of all was Hippocrates, who is often called "the father of modern medicine'' because he invented the concept that  remains the foundation of all medical care as we know it today: the  receptionist. Prior to this invention, when patients came to see the  doctor, the doctor had to actually see them, which, as you can  imagine, took up a lot of his valuable time because they were always  nattering on and on about being sick. But all of a sudden, thanks to  Hippocrates, incoming patients could be intercepted by a receptionist,  who would (1) tell them to take a seat, and then (2) avoid making eye  contact with them for the rest of the afternoon. This breakthrough meant  that a single doctor could schedule as many as 375 appointments per  hour, which is the system we still use today.
With thanks to Bob Wachter for the pick-up!
 
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