The United States Healthcare System from previous years to now, evolved from home remedies and traveling physicians with little knowledge to scientific studies to medical professionals expertise in high technology. Medicine in the United States, before 1800, were dependent on females to take care of their love ones sickness or diseases without medical assistance. Unless the illness became very critical and life threatening, did they then seek medical attention. In those days, scientifically practiced procedure's, performed by physicians did not require proper credentials they request today. A common profession for women was midwifery, until the mid-eighteenth century. Western medical was based on ancient Greek principle of “four humors” …show more content…
The university merged with Massachusetts Medical Society (publishers of today's New England Journal of Medicine), in 1781 and requested to license physicians. Physicians mainly opened medical schools to enhance to enhance medicine. Doctor’s been confident in their work and became entrepreneurs, charging a fee for their services.
In early 1800s, in Europe and in the United States, physicians began to express concerns about bacteria’s that could cause and spread a disease. Clinics in the city and small towns provided charitable funds and services to the unfortunates. Concerns about sanitation and hygiene, led many city governments to create departments of health. Poor sanitation, government-sponsored public health, and healthcare that private healthcare began to depart.
As America developed in mid 1800s, hospitals, first built by city governments to treat the poor, began treating the not-so-poor. Physicians with high authority stopped traveling to see sick patients. They started seeing them under one stable area. Patient who can afford to pay doctors were seen in private rooms. Through the years, hospitals became either public or private. Physician’s need more training led to the Johns Hopkins University's medical school's requirement in 1893. It was required that all medical students have a four-year degree and spend another four years becoming a