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stockholmer

(3,751 posts)
Fri May 18, 2012, 04:44 PM May 2012

Putting a price on life - the Spanish health care system under austerity

http://elpais.com/elpais/2012/05/08/inenglish/1336478136_259257.html


An illegal immigrant sick with cancer who will no longer receive radiotherapy and chemotherapy. A man with a spinal cord injury who will have to pay for part of his wheelchair and the ambulance that takes him to receive treatment several times a week. A stroke victim who will have to pay for a percentage of the nutritional preparations they receive by catheter.

These are all people with names and faces who will no longer be able to receive standard medical attention or will have problems continuing their medical treatment as a consequence of the government's planned health reforms. Arguing that the current national health system is unsustainable, the government has begun a counter-reformation. It is the inverse of the process put in motion 26 years ago by Socialist minister Ernest Lluch that created the current system and universalized healthcare, increasing coverage to eight million people who until then had remained outside its protective umbrella.

The new system, which the government hopes will save 7.2 billion euros, will restrict health-care access for Spain's 153,000 illegal immigrants to emergency treatment only; create a new co-payment system for pharmaceuticals (which will mean, for example, that for the first time pensioners will have to pay for their medicines); and also includes payment plans for the lending of ortho-prosthetic items such as wheelchairs and for nutrition therapy preparations that many patients need to survive.

"It is a matter of life or death that has a price we cannot afford," says Andrés Piñero, whose daughters, eight-year-old Paula and 14-year-old Marta, both suffer from phenylketonuria (PKU), a congenital disorder that prevents them from metabolizing proteins from food. The girls can only eat certain fruits and vegetables and need nutrition therapy preparations to provide them with calcium, magnesium and other essential nutrients. These cost around 2,000 euros a month - more than 22,000 euros per year, per child.

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Putting a price on life - the Spanish health care system under austerity (Original Post) stockholmer May 2012 OP
This won't have a pretty ending. lpbk2713 May 2012 #1
With unemployment in Spain currently at 24.4%, dipsydoodle May 2012 #2

lpbk2713

(42,757 posts)
1. This won't have a pretty ending.
Fri May 18, 2012, 04:48 PM
May 2012



Spaniards are not among the most affluent people by far.
The only ones who will gain here are the morticians.


dipsydoodle

(42,239 posts)
2. With unemployment in Spain currently at 24.4%,
Fri May 18, 2012, 06:54 PM
May 2012

last figure published and apparently the the highest in Europe, their only alternative would be to recoup the 7.2 billion Euros elsewhere. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-17866382

That probably mean either/both further reducing public sector wages or increasing taxes with respect to the remaining 75.6% in work.

Hobson's choice.

Under the circumstances described I don't really see their population having much sympathy with respect to reduced cover for illegal immigrants and restrictions to such people affected are better than sfa.

The root cause of all this was the collapse of their construction industry late 2007 and we all known the background to that - the antics of the US banking sector.

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