Bob, most surgeries performed in hospitals are not of the "face lift" elective type.
Modern medicine can postpone many types of surgery. I have seen a broken hip postponed for three days, due to a clinical reason. We kept the patient in the hospital (required care from ward personnel) and medicated him into a state free of pain. But, without the clinical reason for not doing immediate surgery, it would not have been good care to postpone for 3 days.
Christ clearly gave care on the Sabbath that could have been given the next day. There was no immediate, required, need.
Cancerous tumors can often wait. Most broken bones can wait. But, what does it say about God to tell a patient that we must wait until after the Sabbath to pin broken bones together? In the mean time, we will medicate them into a state where they are feeling no pain.
Gregory, you discussion does not do picture what was described to me. What was described was the intentional scheduling of surgeries on Sabbath, in advance.
"Mr. So and So, I see you need to have surgery for such and such. Which day would work for you?"
"I'm off work on Saturday. How about Saturday."
"Yes, we do have an opening for Saturday."
Look at CH 223, 235. Our medical facilities are supposed to be memorials to the true Sabbath. If they operate like a worldly business in that they do routine, non-essential work on the Sabbath, then they aren't serving the purpose for which they were founded, according to CH 223, 235.
"A spirit of irreverence and carelessness in the observance of the Sabbath is liable to come into our sanitariums. ... Especially should every physician endeavor to set a right example. The nature of his duties naturally leads him to feel justified in doing on the Sabbath many things that he should refrain from doing. So far as possible, he should so plan his work that he can lay aside his ordinary duties.
"Those who, from whatever cause, are obliged to work on the Sabbath, are always in peril; they feel the loss, and from doing works of necessity they fall into the habit of doing things on the Sabbath that are not necessary" (CH 422).
It isn't just in scheduling routine surgeries that we've had some challenges in recent years. Collecting parking lot fees on Friday night after sunset has also been a problem at at least one hospital, but they fixed that, which was good.