Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 28 – That the
ring road around Moscow marks a far deeper divide in Russia than the beltway
around Washington, DC, does in the US has long been obvious. Now, new data show that it
matters in a most immediate and intimate way: residents of the Russian capital currently live on
average 5.8 years longer than do residents of the rest of the country.
Not surprisingly, Moscow officials
are celebrating this trend as yet another success of the Putin era; but for the
90 percent of the population of the Russian Federation who do not live in the
capital and who have seen the availability of medical care decline and their
health worsen, these Moscow figures are an indictment of the government for
what it is not doing to help them.
Unfortunately, because many Westerners
evaluate Russia as a whole by what they see in the only Russian place they
visit, these new Moscow figures are likely to be mistakenly extrapolated too
freely. But despite this danger, one can only welcome any improvement in
Russian health care -- even if it is restricted a single city.
In today’s “NG-Stolitsa,” Tatyana
Popova writes that “objective indicators testify that medicine in the capital
in recent years has achived significant successes in protecting the health of
Muscovites,” with their average life expectancy having increased by 2.6 years over
the last five (ng.ru/ng_stolitsa/2015-09-28/9_life.html).
In Moscow, she
continues, there has been other good demographic news: since 2011, the city has
had more births than deaths and mortality rates have fallen: from 10.9 to 9.7
per 1000 overall since 2010 and by “almost a third” among birth mothers and
infants over the same five-year period.
There has been progress as well in reducing
mortality from particular diseases Popova says. Deaths from tuberculosis have
fallen from 5.6 per 100,000 in 2010 to 2.4 per 100,000 in 2014, and lethal
outcomes from heart attacks have been cut from 30 percent five years ago to 10
percent according to current figures.
These improvements reflect better
equipment in Moscow hospitals and efforts to get patients to necessary doctors
more quickly and efficiently, she continues. And that is reflected in dramatic cuts
in waiting times to see specialists or for procedures. Waiting times for seeing a gynecologist,
Popova reports, have fallen by a factor of three, and the average wait for
computer tomography from 60 days to 15.
What is most striking about such
claims is that last fall, the Moscow city government announced that it was
closing 15 hospitals in the city and firing 1263 doctors and 2990 nurses, a
step some have said was taken to free up for sale the valuable real estate
these facilities occupy (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2014/10/window-on-eurasia-russian-government.html).
And those cuts, part of Putin’s “optimization”
program in the face of budgetary stringencies caused by his aggression in
Ukraine, the resulting sanctions, and the decline in oil prices were part of a
country-wide cut back in government support for the health care of the population.
Over the past year, Moscow reduced
the number of hospital beds available to the Russian people and failed to live
up to promises to boost pay for medical workers and thus is rapidly
transforming Russia into what the Accounting Chamber calls “a land of Potemkin
hospitals” (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2014/08/window-on-eurasia-under-putin-russia.html).
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