Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 15 – The Russian
government’s plan to save money by consolidating hospitals and reducing staff
has failed to meet almost all of its intended goals, but it has achieved one
outcome few would consider a positive one: it has led to a 2.2 percent rise in
death rates among Russians, according to a study by the Audit Chamber.
In a report to the Chamber’s
collegium, auditor Aleksandr Filipenko says that his investigation has shown
that “the main goals of optimization … have not been achieved and the expected
growth in effectiveness and access to medical help has not taken place” (ach.gov.ru/press_center/news/21297).
Only five regions met the four goals
Moscow had set, and many fell short on most of them, although just how severely
is complicated by the fact that central guidance on many questions was anything
but clear and questions about who was to finance what were left unanswered, he
said.
But one trend is clear: the number
of medical facilities available to the population, and the number of doctors
and other medical staff has fallen, decreasing public access to health care and
increasing the amount of time people must spend to get to medical assistance
and the number of people who die because it is not readily available.
Especially hard hit are people in rural
areas. Medical assistance points in
14,900 villages with fewer than 300 residents each simply must be closed if
budgetary goals are to be met, but that means that Russians living in those
places either must travel long distances often over very bad roads or not get
care at all.
According to his investigation,
Filipenko said, there are approximately 17,500 villges in Russia which no do
not have any medical infrastructure or doctors at all. Of these, “more than
11,000 are located more than 20 kilometers from the closest medical
organization where there is a doctor,” and 35 percent of these are not serviced
by public transport.
Moscow’s optimization plan has hit
rural people in another way far harder than it has urban residents. During 2014, hospitals across Russia reduced
their number of beds by 33,757. The cuts were far deeper and more rapid in
district hospitals than in oblast ones and in oblast ones more than in
metropolitan centers.
That in turn led to an increase in
deaths in 61 regions, with the growth in 49 of those regions linked to the
reduction in the number of those who were hospitalized, the direct result of the cutbacks in the number of hospital beds.
Even those who were able to get some medical attention died at greater rates.
In 2014, 17,900 more people admitted
to hospitals died than in 2013, Filipenko said. And the number dying at hope
shot up dramatically especially in areas where hospital access was reduced.
But he argued that the most serious
aspect of the situation is that “the optimization did not lead to a planned
reduction in mortality.” Instead of a decline to 12.8 deaths per 1,000 the plan
called for, there were 13.1 deaths. And “if one compares the indicators for
January-February 2015 with the same period a year earlier, then the growth of
mortality was 2.2 percent.”
There were two areas of growth: the
number of people using private medical services rose by almost a quarter in one
year, a pattern fine for those who have money but not for pensioners and
others, and the pay of those medical staff still employed also went up.
Unfortunately, the latter increase came at the expensive of massive staff cuts.
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