|
Russian
Health Care
A Naturopathic Doctor’s Observations of
Russian Sanitariums
on the Black Sea
by Thomas Stearns Lee, NMD
This article describes a perspective of
Russia obtained during my visit with a Russian friend during July
1993. The trip was through Moscow, by plane to Rostov, then by
train to Sochi on the Black Sea. My friend and I visited
sanitariums and spas and spoke with doctors and nurses about their
healthcare system. My language skills were such that I was
fortunate to have my Russian friend along to help interpret.
My first impression from the train ride
was of a vigorous and strong people familiar with adversity and
survival. Every small town was surrounded by gardens and
plastic-covered hothouses. Decorative trees had edible fruit
that children picked and sold in the markets. Along railroads,
train employees would keep small gardens near places the train
usually stopped.
In the larger hospitals and spas, they
have a real Catch-22. With a developed academia and incoming
Western media, they all love modern pharmaceuticals, but no one can
afford them. What they are left with are some excellent
natural products, often superior hospital-grown vegetables and
fruits, and wonderful hydrotherapy and physical therapy techniques.
What is wrong with all that?
Nothing. But it was ironic to note how embarrassed and
inadequate they felt about their own medical arts. Illusions
about the worth of our technology were not helping them move
forward. The notion of how to profit from treating disease is
confusing when mixed with healthcare concepts.
My observations were made during the
dramatic breakdown of a stable, if oppressive society. For
over 70 years, their healthcare system was organized and extended
through institutions of education, employment, and government.
The elaborate sanitariums I visited in Sochi were maintained as
rewards for high officials in the party, various trade unions, and
regional governments.
In groups and parks, people appeared to
not be as overweight as we expect, or at least on older people it
was packed pretty solid. I saw wider ranges of fashion and
beauty, with some advanced wear-and-tear conditions among the
elderly. Viewing from the train, I saw crowded public
transport, larger numbers of pedestrians, and air pollution of a
diesel flavor in larger towns.
Another notable impression was stress
patterns among kids. The early teens seem to have some
exhaustion and depression patterns that we don’t see as much of in
this country. Life is hard for many people there, and it is
most visible among the young women and children.
In crowd scenes while shopping and
traveling, I found a wider range of age groups and economic classes.
It seemed behavior was more considerate and courteous. Despite
the occasional drunk or non-functioning type, even the teens who
were into makeup, smokes, and Western rock fashions were pretty
sweet about their drama. Animated gossip and flock behavior
were pretty familiar as standard issue school-kid. They had
less gear and fashions, which wasn’t too bad, and it was rare to see
anyone tuned out into earphones.
While institutions of government and
major employers remain in New Russia, the doctors I spoke with were
bewildered as to their future functions. The doctor as a small
business person, or entrepreneur is a completely alien concept.
Marketing of health care to profit private business is a disturbing
notion to many Russians.
For that matter, even the concept of
profit from healthcare is pretty black-hearted to most adults who
grew within the Communist system. Far from fueling growth and
progress, as our myths would have it, profit is suspected as theft
and injustice. You can imagine how welcome joint ventures and
developers are.
The television shows now have ads;
some are very clever and businesses also are beginning to advertise.
But without the social experience of promoting individual talents or
skills, transitions to free-market healthcare will be painful for
everyone. And without disposable income to be spent, hustling
to make profits from providing healthcare services or products will
never be sensible to the Russians. Capitalism is fueled by
hopes.
Healthcare is a different concept in
Russia. American hospitals would have a tough sell over there.
Most of their prevention and nutrition is anti-clinical or despite
the clinic. Doctors are cheap or free if the care is part of
an employer or the state, but they have little to offer as far as
medicines or materials, and people complain that they have no
interest in their work.
Most prevention is called listening to
your grandparents and finding out what worked for them. Every
small-town market has garden produce, including various herbs that
they call "Healing Grasses." The merchants selling these herbs
have opinions to share about their use, in case the grandparents
might be getting things mixed up by now.
For more serious problems, major
hospitals and polyclinics are in no position to rival the resources
and organization of modern American hospitals. Individual
doctors, the majority being women, are very skillful and caring, but
the crash of their currency and political system has affected all
major institutions, including hospitals.
Ask yourself how far your modern
hospital could go without supplies, services, and amenities.
In Russia, problems with supply are incredible because the
infrastructure of communications, transport, and even contract law
have stagnated throughout the Soviet era. The impressions I
got of civilian society suggest many national challenges ahead for
these intelligent and compassionate people.
Wherever these sweeping changes take
Russia, a huge population of educated, intelligent, and hardworking
people will go with her. If transitions can happen without
letting the World Bank strangle her with debt, Russia could amaze
the World in the next few years.
Whenever their skilled physicians
become needed and respected, whatever economy Russia develops will
reward those skills and others will want to mirror that success.
At present, the best physicians have been very unrewarded and their
genius controlled by a bureaucratic nightmare. Morale and
skills have declined as a result.
Of course, so many other problems
contribute to this situation that merely rewarding some doctors
wouldn’t change anything. A stable currency and real
opportunities to survive, based on efforts, skills, and
intelligence, would start to rebuild Russia, and a rebuilt Russia
would bring up the standard of living for much of our world.
Our national health-care organizers are
finding their ideals very limited by reality, and they would do well
to examine Russia. There, the reverse is more the case, and
the consequences of over-governing are quite clear. Service
from one person to another can never be forced or required for long
without some exchange of value.
The Russians will come up with ways to
succeed. If you get a chance, go and meet these kind people
yourself. You will expand your horizons, and maybe theirs,
too.
Top |