Actual Article: "Socialized Health-Care Nightmare"

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Socialized Health-Care Nightmare

Yuri Maltsev and Louise Omdahl

Dr. Maltsev gained his insight as an adviser to the last Soviet government on issues of social policy, including health care, and as a patient in the system. He teaches at Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Louise Omdahl, a nursing educator and manager, is actively involved in humanitarian assistance through nursing contacts in Russia and has visited numerous Russian health-care facilities.

In 1918, the Soviet Union's universal "cradle-to-grave" health-care coverage, to be accomplished through the complete socialization of medicine, was introduced by the Communist government of Vladimir Lenin. "Right to health" was introduced as one of the "constitutional rights" of Soviet citizens. Other socioeconomic "rights" on the "mass-enticing" socialist menu included the right to vacation, free dental care, housing, and a clean and safe environment. As in other fields, the provision of health care was planned and delivered through a special ministry. The Ministry of Health, through its regional Directorates of Health, would pool and distribute centrally provided resources for delivery of medical and sanitary services to the entire population.

The "official" vision of socialists was clean, clear, and simple: all needed care would be provided on an equal basis to the entire population by the state-owned and state-managed health industry. The entire cost of medical services was socialized through the central budget. The advantages of this system were proclaimed to be that a fully socialized health-care system eliminates "waste" that stems to "unnecessary duplication and parallelism" (i.e., competition) while providing full coverage of all health-care problems from birth until death.

But as we have learned from our own separate experiences, the Russian health care system is neither modern nor efficient.

In contrast to the impression created by the liberal American media, health-care institutions in Russia were at least fifty years behind the average U.S. level. Moreover, the filth, odors, cats roaming the halls, and absence of soap and cleaning supplies added to an overall impression of hopelessness and frustration which paralyzed the system. The part of Russia's GNP destined for medical needs is negligible 1and, according to our estimates, is less than 2.5 percent (compared to 14 percent in the United States, 11 percent in Canada, 8 percent in the U.K., etc.).

Polyclinics and hospitals in big cities have extremely large numbers of beds allotted for patients reflecting typical megalomania of bureaucratic planning. The number of beds in big cities would usually range from 800 to 5,000 beds. Despite the difference in average length of stay, less than one-half were utilized. In the United States hospital stays for surgery are three to seven days; in Russia stays average three weeks. American mothers typically leave the hospital a day or two after giving birth. New mothers in Russia remain for at least a week. It was explained that the length of stay was necessary due to unavailability of follow-up care after hospitalization. A physician was reluctant to discharge a patient before the majority of healing had occurred. In addition, there was no financial incentive for early discharge, as reimbursement was directly related to number of "patient-days, " not the necessity for those days.

Scarce Supplies, Inadequate Personnel

Supplies are painstakingly scarce-surgeries at a major trauma-emergency center in Moscow that we observed had no oxygen supply for an entire floor of operating rooms. Monitoring equipment consisted of a manual blood pressure cuff, no airway, and no central monitoring of the heart rate. Intravenous tubing was in such poor condition that it had clearly been reused many times. The surgeon's gloves were also reused and were so stretched that they slid partially off during the surgery. Needles for suturing were so dull that it was difficult to penetrate the skin. All of this took place in 95 degree F temperature with unscreened windows open; though the hospital was built less than twenty years ago, there was no air conditioning.

Utilization of medical/nursing personnel was very different from our model. The ratio of nurses to patients in the ordinary hospitals was 1 to 30, compared to 1 to 5 in the United States. Duties of the nurse ranged from housekeeping to following medical orders. When asked for her "best nurse," a head nurse in Moscow helped a young woman up from scrubbing the floor. Five minutes later she was practicing intravenous insertions with equipment donated by us. Both of these functions were in her "job description," however unofficial that may be. Nurses are unlicensed and are not considered an independent profession in Russia. As a result, all their duties are delegated, with assessment and most documentation completed by physicians. The education of nurses occurs at an age comparable to the last two to three years of American high school . 2 Nurses are educated by physicians, not other nurses. A separate body of scientific knowledge in nursing does not exist. The role of a patient advocate, heavily assumed by nurses in the United States was distinctly lacking in Russia. Nurses were subjugated to medical bureaucracy. Patients' rights and patients' privacy were all but ignored. There is no legal mechanism to protect patients from malpractice. To our amazement we were asked to photograph freely in patient-care settings without seeking patient consent. Patient education and informed consent were dismissed by the socialized system as an unnecessary increase in time and the cost of care. If the society does not respect individual rights in general, it would not do it in hospitals. The Russian medical oath protects the "good of the people," not necessarily the "good of the person." 3

Apathy and Irresponsibility

Widespread apathy and low quality of work paralyzed the health-care system in the same way as all other sectors of Russian economy. Irresponsibility, expressed by a popular Russian saying ("They pretend they are paying us and we pretend we are working. ") resulted in the appalling quality of the "free" services, widespread corruption, and loss of life. According to official Russian estimates, 78 percent of all AIDS victims in Russia contracted the virus through dirty needles or HIV-tainted blood in the state run hospitals. To receive minimal attention by doctors and nursing personnel the patient was supposed to pay bribes. Dr. Maltsev witnessed a case when a "non-paying" patient died trying to reach a lavatory at the end of the long corridor after brain surgery. Anesthesia usually would "not be available" for abortions or minor ear, nose, throat, and skin surgeries, and was used as a means of extortion by unscrupulous medical bureaucrats. Being a People's Deputy in the Moscow region in 1987-89, Dr. Maltsev received many complaints about criminal negligence, bribes taken by medical apparatchiks, drunken ambulance crews, and food poisoning in hospitals and child-care facilities.

Not surprisingly, government bureaucrats and Communist party officials as early as 1921 (two years after Lenin's socialization of medicine) realized that the egalitarian system of health care is good only for their personal interest as providers, managers, and rationers, but not as private users of the system. So, in all countries with socialized medicine we observe a two-tier system one for the "gray masses," and the other, with a completely different level of service for the bureaucrats and their intellectual servants. In the USSR it was often the case that while workers and peasants would be dying in the state hospitals, the medicines and equipment which could save their lives were sitting unused in the nomenklatura system. 4

A "Privileged Class"?

Western admirers of socialism would praise Russia for its concern with the planned "scientific" approach to childbearing and care of children. "There is only one privileged class in Russia- children," proclaimed Clementine Churchill on her visit to a showcase Stalinist kindergarten in Moscow in 1947. The real "privileged class" Stalin's nomenklatura - were so pleased with the wife of the "chief imperialist" Winston Churchill that they awarded her with an "Order of the Red Banner." Facts, however, testify to the opposite of Mrs. Churchill's opinion. The official infant mortality rate in Russia is more than 2.5 times as large as in the United States and more than five times that of Japan. The rate of 24.5 deaths per 1,000 live births was questioned recently by several deputies to the Russian Parliament who claim that it is seven times higher than in the United States. This would make the Russian death rate 55 compared to the U.S. rate of 8.1 percent per 1,000 live births. In the rural regions of Sakha, Kalmykia, and Ingushetia, the infant mortality rate is close to 100 per 1,000 births, putting these regions in the same category as Angola, Chad, and Bangladesh. of thousands of infants fall victim to influenza every year, and the proportion of children dying from pneumonia is on the increase. Rickets, caused by a lack of vitamin D and unknown in the rest of the modern world, is killing many young people. 5 Uterine damage is widespread, thanks to the 7.3 abortions the average Russian woman undergoes during childbearing years. After seventy years of socialist economizing, 57 percent of all Russian hospitals do not have running hot water, while 36 percent of hospitals located in rural areas of Russia do not have water or sewage. Isn't it amazing that socialist governments, while developing sophisticated systems of weapons and space exploration would completely ignore basic human needs of their citizens? "It was no secret that on many occasions in the past 70 years, workers' health had been sacrificed to the needs of the economy-although the cost of treating the resulting diseases had eventually outweighed the supposed gains," 6 stated Russian State Public Health Inspector E. Belyaev.

Man-made ecological disasters like catastrophes at nuclear power stations near Chelyabinsk and then Chernobyl, the literal liquidation of the Aral Sea, serious contamination of the Volga River, Azov Sea and great Siberian rivers, have made unbearable the quality of life both in the major cities and the countryside. According to Alexei Yablokov, the Minister for Health and Environment of the Russian Federation, 20 percent of the people live in "ecological disaster zones," and an additional 35-40 percent in "ecologically unfavorable conditions." 7 As a sad legacy of the socialist experiment, we observe a marked decline in the population of Russia and experts predict a continuation of this trend through the end of the century. From Russian State Statistical Office data, it appears that in 1993 there were 1.4 million births and 2.2 million deaths. Because of inward migration of Russians from the "near abroad" - former "republics" of the Soviet empire, the net fall in population was limited to 500,000. The dramatic rise in mortality and significant decline in fertility is attributed primarily to the appalling quality of health services, and the deteriorating environment. The head of the Department of Human Resources reckons that the fertility index will remain at around 1. 5 until the end of the century, whereas an index of 2.11 would be necessary to maintain the present population. 8But, "the only lesson of history is that it does not teach us anything" says a popular Russian aphorism. Despite the obvious collapse of socialist medicine in Russia, and its bankruptcy everywhere else, it is still alive and growing in the United States. It possesses a mortal danger to freedom, health, and the quality of life for us and generations to come.

Incentives Matter

The chief reason for the dire state of the Russian health-care system is the incentive structure based on the absence of property rights. The current lack of goods and education within health care has caused Russians to look to the United States for assistance and guidance. In 1991 Yeltsin signed into law a Proposal for Insurance Medicine. 9 The intent is to privatize the health-care system in the long run and decentralize medical control. "The private ownership of hospitals and other units is seen as a critical determining factor of the new system of 'insurance' medicine." 10 It is moving to the direction the United States is leaving-less government control over health care. While national licensing and accreditation within health-care professions and institutions are still lacking in Russia, they are needed for self-governance as opposed to central government control.

Decay and the appalling quality of services is characteristic of not only "barbarous" Russia and other Eastern European nations, it is a direct result of the government monopoly on health care. In "civilized" England, for example, the waiting list for surgery is nearly 800,000 out of a population of 55 million. State of the art equipment is non-existent in most British hospitals. In England only 10 percent of the health-care spending is derived from private sources. Britain pioneered in developing kidney dialysis technology, and yet the country has one of the lowest dialysis rates in the world. The Brookings Institution (hardly a supporter of free markets) found 7,000 Britons in need of hip replacement, between 4,000 and 20,000 in need of coronary bypass surgery, and some 10,000 to 15,000 in need of cancer chemotherapy are denied medical attention in Britain each year.11Age discrimination is particularly apparent in all government-run or heavily regulated systems of health care. In Russia patients over 60 years are considered worthless parasites and those over 70 years are often denied even elementary forms of the health care. In the U.K., in the treatment of chronic kidney failure, those who were 55 years old were refused treatment at 35 percent of dialysis centers. At age 65, 45 percent at the centers were denied treatment, while patients 75 or older rarely received any medical attention at these centers. In Canada, the population is divided into three age groups-below 45; 45-65; and over 65, in terms of their access to health care. Needless to say, the first group, who could be called the "active taxpayers," enjoy priority treatment.

Socialized medicine creates massive government bureaucracies, imposes costly job destroying mandates on employers to provide the coverage, imposes price-controls which will inevitably lead to shortages and poor quality of service. It could lead to non-price rationing (i.e., based on political considerations, corruption, and nepotism) of health care by government bureaucrats. Socialized medical systems have not served to raise general health or living standards anywhere. There is no analytical reason or empirical evidence that would lead us to expect it to do so. And in fact both analytical reasoning and empirical evidence point to the opposite conclusion. But the failure of socialized medicine to raise health and longevity has not affected its appeal for politicians, administrators, and intellectuals, that is, for actual or potential seekers of power.

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At the time of the original publication, Dr. Maltsev gained his insight as an adviser to the last Soviet government on issues of social policy, including health care, and as a patient in the system. He taught at Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Louise Omdahl, a nursing educator and manager, was actively involved in humanitarian assistance through nursing contacts in Russia and has visited numerous Russian health-care facilities.

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1. Pavel D. Tichtchenko and Boris G. Yudin, "Toward a Bioethics in Post-Communist Russia," Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, No. 4, 1992, p. 296.

2. C. Fleischman and V. Lubamudrov, "Heart to Heart: Teaching Pediatric Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery to Nurses in St. Petersburg, Russia," Journal ofPediatric Nursing, Vol. 8, No. 2, April, 1993, p. 135.

3. Pavel D. Tichtchenko and Boris G. Yudin, "Toward a Bioethics in Post-Communist Russia," Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, No. 4, 1992, p. 298.

4. Here in the United States the system of fully socialized medicine is not yet complete, but we already observe the "parallel" system of health care for bureaucrats who enjoy coverage practically unseen in the private sector. Referring to this system, Dr. Stuart Butler of the Heritage Foundation remarked: "Why reinvent the wheel? If a working health-care system already exists, that's good enough for official Washington, why not to use it as our model, improve upon it and let the rest of America enjoy the same kind of program as members of Congress and Clinton's White House staff." Heritage Today, Winter 1994, p. 4.

5. N. Eberstadt, The Poverty of Communism (New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1990), p. 14-15.

6. The Lancet, Vol. 337, June 15, 1991, p. 1469.

7. The Economist, November 4, 1989, p. 24.

8. Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty Daily Report, February 16, 1994.

9. George Schieber, "Health Care Financing Reform in Russia and Ukraine," Health Affairs, Supplement 1993, p. 294.

10. Michael Ryan, "Health Care in Moscow, British Medical Journal, Vol. 307, September 1993, " p. 782.

11. Joseph L. Bast, Richard C. Rue, and Stuart A. Wesbury, Jr., Why We Spend Too Much on Health Care and What We Can Do About It (Chicago: The Heartland Institute, 1993), P. 101.

Reprinted with permission from The Freeman, a publication of The Foundation for Economic Education, Inc., November 1994, Vol. 44, No. 11.

Interesting, in a historical sort of way.

Let's see now? Russia with capitalism restored has shortened men's life span about 9 years in a single decade.....

Pravda.RU:Top Stories:More in detail

17:02 2001-02-03

In Russia is the shortest life-span in Europe

A grave economic plight has had its effect on Russians' span of life. According to the Council of Europe, because of unbearable conditions male Russians live an average of 61.3 years, and women 73 years. This is much less than under Soviet rule when the average life expectancy among men in the USSR exceeded 70 years.

NurseHardee

Well, that is OK, because they consider you a "Parasite" once you get past 65 anyway.... Capitalism, is ALWAYS preferable to Socialism or Communism. Period.

I would have assumed, even before I read the article, that the Soviet system would be just as clumsy, corrupt, and inefficient at providing healthcare as it was at everything else. That's why it's not around anymore! :) I would have to balance the Soviet experience against the single-payer systems in other countries that *are* working. Of course, no system is perfect ...

Kitkat24, you mentioned on the other thread about this topic that you were interested in real info, not just rhetoric and mantras -- years ago, in my BSN completion program, I took a course on healthcare financing and did my major research paper for the course on comparing/contrasting the finances and outcomes of healthcare systems in the US and several other countries (West (at the time!) Germany, Japan, Canada and the UK). I had no trouble, even before the internet :chuckle , finding LOTS of published hard data and research on the numbers ($$$) and outcomes of the various systems. Of course, that would all be terribly outdated by now, but I'm sure that there is even more data out there these days, and it would be fairly easy to find.

I applaud your interest in getting solid information, and encourage you to go looking -- I certainly became a true believer after I did some research!

Hi!

I really am having trouble finding current and up to date scholarly journal information on the subject. It is all research from the 90's. Surely, there is information within the last few years studying all of the governments that have universal healthcare. I too am completing my BSN and am looking for current and accurate, information on both sides of the issue.

Sometimes, I think that just because it is "scholarly" and found on ebscohost and the academic search engines, and peer reviewed does not mean that, #1 It is not simply rhetoric. #2 It fairly represents both sides of the issue in an unbiased manner. and #3 That the academia representatives are ethical. This is evidenced by the Australian products Peter Singer *supposed bioethitist at Princeton University and his partner in crime Elga Kruse RN* They are two of thee most UN-ethical people on the planet. And, I wonder if the two of them ARE the product of a socialized medicine.

Kitkat24

I used (in my paper), in addition to recent, relevant research studies published in economics, sociology, and medical journals, a lot of pure statistical data on healthcare spending and morbidity/mortality statistics published by the governments of the various countries. I found this data in big, ugly, dark hardbound volumes on the shelves in my university library. The newest numbers were a couple years old (by the time it got collected and published), but that's pretty relevant.

However, I'm not sure that a published article is obligated to "fairly represent both sides of the issue in an unbiased manner" in order to be taken seriously. Lots of papers are written from an advocacy point of view, and we expect authors to arrive at a conclusion (other than, "so there's the argument for both sides ..."), don't we? That's why I would never form a personal opinion based on *one* paper or study, and why a single research study is never considered the definitive answer to any question, merely the beginning of the conversation ... In all of the scholarly literature, the reader has an obligation to look at the methodology, look at the numbers, look at the conclusions drawn, and arrive at a personal conclusion about the validity or weight of what the authors of a particular article have to say.

If there is a lack of current literature (I don't know because I haven't looked recently myself), it may because the interested parties feel that this question is a done deal. A few years ago, I worked in an inpatient psych setting where the question was raised of having the nursing staff wear uniforms (scrubs) instead of street clothes. This was hotly debated by various factions of the nursing staff, and the other CNS and I tried to do a lit search to find the current literature on uniforms in psych settings. Turned out there was no recent literature! Plenty of stuff from 20 or 30 years ago, nothing newer than that. We finally gave up and decided that this must be because everyone figured the question of uniforms in psych settings had been "done to death" and settled quite a while back -- no need for any new studies, no new questions to be answered.

Since there have just been a few articles posted on threads here recently, I'm guessing there's stuff out there. You're not just looking at nursing literature, are you? That's not where you'll find it (although you may want to look, if you haven't, at the ANA position paper on why the ANA supports a single-payer plan for the US). (NOT that I'm saying the ANA position is the final word on anything -- just as part of a comprehensive exploration of the topic ...)

You may also want to look at some of the "classic" literature on the subject -- nothing much has changed, except that the numbers for the US are getting worse as time goes on! :rolleyes:

I began my research as an agnostic on the question -- was raised by a physician father who believed that "socialized medicine" in this country would be the end of civilization as we know it, and felt like *I* didn't know enough to have an opinion and wanted to find out more. I came out the other end a single-payer true believer ;) Hope I don't sound like I'm beating you over the head on any of this, and good luck with your search!

Nobody addressed the reality that it's capitalism that is NOW reducing life span in the former Soviet Union, and not the previous system with all its supposed defects. How long are apologists for capitalism going to keep blaming the old regime for this horror?

It reminds me of how the Western press harped on the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia for killing people, and now Saddam Hussein and Osama get all the blame for what the US has done to mess up the entire region over the last half century plus. Forgotten is how the US dropped more tonnage of bombs on Cambodia than all the tonnage of bombs dropped by every country in WW2. And forgotten is how the US supported Iraq as it attacked Iran in the '80s, and how the US created the Islamic fundamentalist terrorists to attack the Soviet Union.

Pro-capitalist people are not real good at accepting responsibility for the destructiveness of their own actions. They believe that imperialism is a good thing when the others are victims, and not the country they live in (or supposedly so, at least they think).

NurseHardee

well said, NurseHardee.

You said:

capitalism that is NOW reducing life span in the former Soviet Union

So, what is the treatment regimen for "Capitalism"? Can you take an antibiotic to treat it, or an anti-viral?

What is the "cure" for the capitalism that is killing the Soviet Union? Maybe, they should go back to communism? Then they would have no legal right to life or liberty or any pursuit of happiness that wasn't government, run, sponsered, and paid for? People who want to worship the God of their choice can go back to hiding in basements and being beaten to a pulp for worshiping?

This is about universal healthcare. The topic is not anti-war, anti-capitalism, anti-American.

Thanks

Kitkat

Yawn. Then let's go back to the basics, Kitkat. Tell me how it is that people like Leonid Breznev build up the Soviet Union average life span to 70 some odd years, but US stooge allies like Yeltsin, The Drunkard, and Putin, the exKGB henchman, have slung a decade plus off this life span in a little over a decade? Must be the great advice they got from Maggie, Ronnie, and Dub, right?

And then tell me how the US has used free enterprise to come up with the worst health indices in the industrialized world. And all at such a low price tag! How antiAmerican of me to mention this stuff/////

NurseHardee

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Kitkat...

This is about universal healthcare. The topic is not anti-war, anti-capitalism, anti-American.

Thanks

Kitkat

Okay so there system is scary, but that doesn't justify the bull that is going on in ours!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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