The opening up in China, he said, "has been a great success."
"But I would hesitate to free up the health sector so quickly. I think that is one of the sectors in the economy where the public control actually makes sense," he pointed out.
|
"Do not copy the United States, that is a very inefficient healthcare system," he underlined.
The professor noted that in most countries the healthcare system accounts for around 10 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP).
"In the United States it is 17 percent, very expensive, while there are some countries including China which need to put more of the national income into health," he explained to Xinhua.
However, McFadden stressed, the benchmark should not be how much a country spends on health but how healthy it keeps the population and how truly concerned its doctors are about the health of their patients.
By these standards, he said, "China still has a ways to go" but has started a reform process which has already led the country to "doing a lot better than it used to."