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Georgian Disabled Stripped of Benefits

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  • Georgian Disabled Stripped of Benefits

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    Georgian Disabled Stripped of Benefits
    [02:10 pm] 02 June, 2007

    Reforms leave ten thousand in poverty, say campaigners `Giorgi was
    ready to give his life for his homeland, but the government has even
    taken away his pension,' said Mzia, the mother of 40-year-old Giorgi
    Vashadze.

    In May, Vashadze, who fought in the wars in Abkhazia and South Ossetia
    of the early Nineties, was stripped of the `category two' disabled
    status he was awarded in 1999 because of a long list of ailments
    including gunshot wounds, concussion, bouts of depression, repeated
    cardiac seizures and cranial problems.

    As a war veteran, he received a monthly benefit of 70 laris (around 40
    US dollars) until it was cancelled on May 1.

    `My son has an unemployed wife and three young children,' said
    Mzia. `He is unable to work, as he permanently needs to take strong
    painkillers.'

    According to Georgia's statistics department, just over 231,000 people
    were registered as disabled last year. Only those in the more serious
    first and second categories are entitled to the standard allowance of
    38 laris (22 dollars) a month.

    The new reform, instituted on May 1, is targeting people who are
    believed to be claiming category two status fraudulently.

    In January, the ministry of health abolished the expert panels that
    were hitherto responsible for assigning disabled status, and entrusted
    the decisions to ordinary doctors instead.

    A new state agency for regulating medical activity is being set up to
    monitor the doctors who will now take the decisions, and both
    hospitals and doctors now face severe fines if they are found to be
    abusing their authority.

    The ministry said the old system was blighted by corruption. `In 2006,
    we traced down 9,313 violations in which category two invalidity
    status was awarded following illegal, corrupt deals,' said deputy
    minister of labour, healthcare and social security David
    Meskhishvili..

    One of the men spearheading the changes, Devi Tabidze, who heads the
    department of labour and social welfare in the Georgian health
    ministry, told IWPR the system was badly in need of reform.

    `I've had my gall-bladder taken out, but I don't look like an invalid,
    do I?' said Tabidze. `But people like me get themselves qualified as
    category two invalids. In 2005 and 2006, this irresponsible behaviour
    cost the budget 15 million laris [nine million dollars].'

    `The reform has not affected those with permanent invalidity status,'
    insisted Tabidze. `Under the new rules, 20 conditions are no longer
    classified as disabling. That means over 10,000 people will lose their
    benefits.'

    He said that from now on, not only the medical diagnosis but also the
    patient's ability to work would be assessed to determine eligibility
    for disability status.

    Many Georgians say the changes are pushing them into penury.

    Tamara Sulaberidze, 34, who has a slight mental disability and will
    never be able to work, has been stripped of her category two status
    and the 38-lari allowance that goes with it.

    None of the six Sulaberidze family members works, and they are already
    in great financial difficulty. Now they are worried about where they
    will find the money to buy the medicines Tamara needs.

    `How can she work if she can't move around on her own?' asked Tamara's
    sister, Maya. `She is often aggressive and responds to situations
    badly.'

    Maya says she does not believe that health minister Lado Chipiashvili
    knows about the impact the reforms are having.

    `I want to get the minister's email address and tell him about the
    trouble people are in after they've been stripped of their pensions,'
    she said.

    Tamara's case also troubles Giorgi Geleishvili, head of Tbilisi's
    psycho-neurological clinic. He said her situation alone was sufficient
    reason to review the change in criteria.

    `People suffering from mild mental retardation with pathological
    behaviour won't ever be able to work, as they will immediately get
    into conflict with someone,' he said. `We paid them the benefits to
    keep them from starving to death or stealing.'

    Nato Khonelidze, director of the non-governmental organisation
    Antistigma agreed, saying the health ministry's recommendations were
    far too vague.

    `The decisions were taken under emergency conditions,' she
    said. `These instructions should be made more transparent to avoid
    making mistakes when determining disability status.'

    The new rules also impose stricter rules on people whose conditions do
    qualify for a disability allowance. For instance, they will now have
    to pay between 70 and 100 laris for a medical examination to determine
    their eligibility. The test used to be free.


    Anna Kopaliani, who is epileptic, has been told she will only receive
    disability status if her fits are diagnosed as frequent. This will
    require her to make regular trips to hospital and pay for tests that
    she cannot afford.

    `I will have to forego the benefit, as each night spent in hospital
    has to be paid for and an encephalogram costs 35 laris. That is one
    month's allowance,' said Kopaliani.

    The abolition of the panels of experts has also drawn criticism. `Many
    countries carry out medical examinations to determine disability
    status, but it is always licensed experts, not inexperienced doctors,
    who do this,' complained Nato Khonelidze.

    IWPR asked Tabidze whether the government plans to help people
    deprived of disability status to find jobs. He said that an employment
    project was being devised jointly with the business sector, adding,
    `But this is a problem for the future, and it's too early to talk
    about it right now.'

    Georgia's business sector does not currently provide the special
    facilities needed if disabled people are to be employed.

    By Fati Mamiashvili in Tbilisi (CRS No. 394 31-May-07)


    Fati Mamiashvili is a freelance journalist and IWPR contributor in
    Tbilisi

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting's Caucasus Reporting Service

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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