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  • Corruption feeds Russian health crisis

    Corruption feeds Russian health crisis
    By MARIA DANILOVA
    ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
    Jun 28, 2007

    MOSCOW -- When Karen Papiyants lost his leg in a road accident last
    year, his medical nightmare was only beginning.

    Although like any Russian he was entitled to free treatment, he says
    the doctors strongly suggested he pay $4,500 into their St. Petersburg
    hospital's bank account, or be deprived proper care - and perhaps not
    even survive.

    Faced with that choice, the 37-year-old truck driver's relatives
    scrambled to scrape together the money. But Papiyants said that
    didn't stop the nursing staff from leaving him unattended for most of
    the night and giving him painkillers only after he screamed in agony.

    "It's nothing but blackmail and extortion on the part of doctors,"
    Papiyants said.

    In theory Russians are supposed to receive free basic medical
    care. But patients and experts say doctors, nurses and surgeons
    routinely demand payments - even bribes - from those they treat. And
    critics say the practice persists despite Russia's booming economy and
    its decision to spend billions to improve the health care system.

    Medical care in Russia is among the worst in the industrialized
    world. A 2000 World Health Organization report ranked Russia's health
    system 130th out of 191 countries, on a par with nations such as Peru
    and Honduras.

    This is one of the few nations in the world where life expectancy has
    declined sharply in the past 15 years. The average Russian can expect
    to live only to age 66 - at least a decade less than in most Western
    democracies, according to a 2005 World Bank report. For men, the
    figure is closer to 59 - meaning many Russian men don't live long
    enough to start collecting their pension at age 60.

    Compounded by alcoholism, heart disease claims proportionately more
    lives than in most of the rest of the world. Death rates from
    homicide, suicide, auto accidents and cancer are also especially high.

    Russia's population has dropped precipitously in the past 15 years, to
    below 143 million in what President Vladimir Putin calls "the most
    acute problem of contemporary Russia."

    In 2004, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
    Development, Russia spent $441 per capita on health care, about a
    fifth of what the Europeans spend. Over the past two years the
    government has more than doubled health care spending to some $7
    billion, but that still works out to only about 3.4 percent of all
    government spending, and the World Health Organization recommends at
    least 5 percent.

    Experts here say new spending does little if it fails to tackle
    corruption.

    The state covers all Russians under a standardized medical insurance
    package, while well-heeled citizens can buy extra insurance and be
    treated privately.

    In the Soviet era, patients occasionally rewarded doctors with money
    or gifts, but were largely guaranteed free treatment. The Soviet
    Union's public health system was, for a time at least, considered
    among the world's best.

    But the system failed to keep up with Western medicine, and after the
    Soviet collapse, went into decline. Today, many who can't afford to
    pay or bribe - especially those in remote provinces - may never
    receive proper care.

    Some experts say this has helped drive up death rates.

    "Corruption in health care is a threat to Russia's national security
    in the broadest sense of the word," said Yelena Panfilova, head the
    Russian branch of Transparency International, a global corruption
    watchdog.

    According to a summer 2006 study commissioned by the group, 13 percent
    of 1,502 respondents who had sought medical help during the previous
    year had to pay an average of $90 under the table, out of wages
    averaging $480 a month. The poll had a margin of error of 2.6
    percentage points.

    Panfilova also said medical and pharmaceutical companies routinely
    bribe health officials so that hospitals buy their equipment and
    medicines, even though their quality is often not the best.

    Kirill Danishevsky, a health researcher with the Russian Academy of
    Sciences' Open Health Institute, has estimated that up to 35 percent
    of money spent on health care consists of under-the-table payments.

    At the Dzhanelidze Emergencies Institute where Papiyants was treated,
    spokesman Vadim Stozharov denied that doctors refused to provide free
    care. But he conceded the hospital has received so many similar
    complaints it set up a hot line to deal with them.

    The Health Ministry declined to comment on the bribery
    allegations. But Galina Lavrishcheva, the top health official in
    Stupino, an industrial town in the Moscow region, acknowledged that
    health care workers sometimes demand payoffs.

    "Yes, it is true, I am not going to hide it - extortion takes place,"
    Lavrishcheva said.

    The Stupino regional hospital is at the forefront of government reform
    efforts. Officials have fought overcrowding by cutting the number of
    beds from 800 to 625, have set up an outpatient clinic and have
    installed new equipment, including ultrasound and electrocardiogram
    machines.

    Overspecialization, a legacy of the Soviet era, is a big problem
    because patients are shuttled from one narrowly focused specialist to
    another.

    Meanwhile, no physician generally takes responsibility for their state
    of health.

    Dozens of Stupino's specialists have been retrained as general
    practitioners and their salaries raised to reduce the lure of bribes
    and create incentives for more doctors to become GPs.

    Yelena Filippova, a freshly retrained GP, now treats some 2,000
    patients and earns $700 a month, more than double her previous
    salary. Filippova, 27, says the system is more efficient. Her patients
    like it as well.

    "It's professional, it's high quality, it's quick and convenient - you
    don't have to stand in lines," said Viktor Lenok, a 60-year-old
    retiree, whom Filippova treats for asthma.

    But critics say these changes are no substitute for radical change -
    just a high-profile way of spending the country's oil-driven wealth in
    an election year. They insist the reform does not address bribe-taking
    by emergency health care providers and medical specialists.

    "A huge heap of money is being pumped into the same health care system
    - but why invest into something that doesn't work?" said health
    researcher Danishevsky. "The very system needs to be reformed."
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