Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 16 – Health “optimization,”
Putin’s plan to save money being spent for health care, has now come to the
Russian capital where Aleksey Khripun, head of the Moscow city healthcare
department, says that 20 to 30 percent of those now hospitalized could and should
have been treated as outpatients at clinics.
The shift is being portrayed as a
way to cope with the rising number of Muscovites needing medical treatment,
with Khripun arguing that they want to shift funds from hospitals to clinics in
order to improve the care residents of the capital receive (newizv.ru/news/city/16-01-2020/moskovskie-vlasti-predlozhili-otpravit-lechitsya-doma-20-30-patsientov-bolnits/rrr).
Finding the right balance between
hospital and ambulatory care is a challenge for all medical systems, but it
seems clear that in the Russian case, such a shift of resources is designed in
the first instance to save money because putting patients in hospitals is much
more expensive than treating them elsewhere.
That this plan is about saving money
rather than improving patient care is suggested not only by the track record of
“optimization” (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/08/admitting-optimization-has-failed-putin.html)
but also by another recent set of Russian government moves that in the name of
improving health care are actually making it worse.
In hospitals in St. Petersburg and
across Russia, medical personnel who are classified as invalids for one reason
or another and who have been working to provide care to others are losing their
jobs. This is being done in the name of protecting their health but in fact it is
part of the cutback in the number of hospital employees (mbk-news.appspot.com/suzhet/massovye-uvolneniya-medrabotnikov/).
What these developments highlight is
that Vladimir Putin’s much vaunted strategy of “hybrid” war is being extended
into other sectors of Russian life, with the government taking nominally for
one set of reasons even though they are being taken for an entirely different
set of ones.
In the military sphere, that continues
to confuse many in Russia and the West. Perhaps not surprisingly, other Russian
officials have taken notice and are adopting the same stragegy.
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