Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Proposal for Socializing Cuba’s Medical System

Proposal for Socializing Cuba's Medical System
April 16, 2012
Pedro Campos

HAVANA TIMES, April 16 — The Cuban public health system is another
sector that has suffered deterioration due to the structural crisis of
the current model. This is recognized in part by the government/party,
which decided to make staff and budget cuts that have added to the
decline of that sector.

This system lacks supplies, medicines and diagnostic resources,
therefore forcing some to turn to the black market. Health care
facilities that serve the general public (those not intended for
political and military leaders or foreigners) fail to meet all the needs
of patients or do so with deficiencies, despite the enormous sacrifices
and efforts of the staff.

These government-exploited wage-labor health workers — though
professionals — are underpaid, underfed and deprived of adequate
conditions to carry out their humanitarian labor. They are subject to
the demands of bureaucrats and the people but are not well appreciated,
as was demonstrated in an extensive exchange of emails over the Infomed
network, which was hardly reported by the official press.

Many medical professionals go on international missions — which separate
families and create social problems — seeking material advantages
offered by the government. As a result of the prioritization of these
international programs, we have felt a specialist shortage at home.

Despite special restrictions on health care workers, many of them leave
the country permanently, as do other professionals in other industries
looking for personal fulfillment. As an example, I'm aware of a class of
32 dentistry graduates, of which there are only three who are now
working here on the island.

At the same time, what has been occurring is a form of in-kind or cash
payment for medical services rendered, usually evolving in an unplanned
or un-demanded way, yet the low wages in this field make it difficult to
turn down these activities. A doctor who requested a salary increase was
suspended from practice for years, and it was not until he went on a
hunger strike recently that the Ministry of Public Health (MINSAP)
restored that right to him.

None of the measures for the system's "updating" can solve such problems
since their causes are systemic. These can only be resolved by changes
in how these defects are produced: the state-centralized wage-labor
exploiting form of medical service delivery.

So What Can Be Done?

What is needed is to advance processes of socialization,
democratization, de-bureaucratization and getting the government out of
the management, administration, operation and compensation in the
structures of the health care sub-system.

This should occur in all health care facilities where there is a
confluence of professional and occupational interests, health care and
medical scientific interests, and the interests of administrative,
workforce and social groups.

We must contemplate other forms of income beyond the current
government-centralized bureaucratic budgetary approach, with it
principles that fail to reflect reality in constantly changing health
facilities. This causes insufficient or surplus resources to be
allocated to different health care centers, while the meager funds for
salaries remain stagnant.

A major part of the solution would be to open up other possibilities for
raising revenues for the health care budget that would retain universal
free health care. Likewise other options could be developed, such as a
"mutualism movement" among trade unions and professional associations.

What could also be considered is a fair tax policy directed at
continuing to subsidize health care costs though excise taxes on luxury
goods and products that generate diseases, such as alcohol and tobacco.

With a budget that would include the collection of such taxes and
specific percentages of the revenue generated from medical treatment to
foreigners in Cuba and abroad, and the social security system should pay
each health care unit for the precise services provided to the people
under its coverage.

In this way, with those revenues, each medical entity could autonomously
manage and finance their costs and improve the income from their workers
according to their productive output.
This does not involve "selling" medical services, but finding a better
way to compensate medical workers, making the services less burdensome
on the state budget and making these more efficient for everyone equally.

This would move away from the current de-incentivizing system whereby
salaries are fixed by job description categories, which don't correspond
to the professional's real contributions. In addition to these
categories, the on-call duty and concrete work of professionals would be
paid with respect to quality and quantity.

Offer Legal Alternatives to Increase Income

Part of the overall solution would also be in making possible forms of
self-employment for retirees and by workers active in the public health
care sector (once they have concluded their day in the hospital).

In this manner, medical professionals could provide consultations, treat
the sick and give home physiotherapy – in this way promoting these
services and without criminalizing voluntary payments by patients.
This would improve the economic position of our health care workers,
freeing them from having to accept "gifts," "look for "missions," or
risk working "under the table."

The schematic and conservative hardliners, opposed to making any change
to the neo-Stalinist statism wage-labor exploiting system, would raise
the cry: "They want to privatize medicine!" – these same people who have
turned a blind eye to such realities and confuse statism with
socialization, and confuse the state and society.

Privatizing medical care would mean turning over hospitals,
laboratories, research centers, and the production and sale of drugs to
private capital for the exploitation of wage-laboring scientists,
doctors, paramedical staff, and the patients.

This is what's wanted by the supporters of the free competition of
capital. But that is not what is being proposed here or what is needed.

It's a question of freeing this sector from the tutelage and
exploitation to which it is subjected by the bureaucratic state, but
instead socializing production, putting it directly it into the hands of
its workers, making the service self-managed, and improving the care
provision, well-being and health workers.

Socialism Isn't Only Distribution

The "state revolutionaries" are committing the same reformist mistake in
this field as they are in the rest of the economic sectors. They
understand socialism as something regarding the sphere of distribution,
and not production.(1) and (2)

Medical professionals, like other professionals, have needs that the
government by his own admission cannot ensure. The least it should do is
allow them to develop autonomous, collective or individual pathways to
improve their living conditions.

By implementing these proposals, workers would feel more committed to
their service, take better care of resources (the "diversion" of these
would decline or disappear), discipline would be assumed consciously and
people would be treated by the doctor they want and not by one they "get."

It would solve the infinite basic problems that today require patients
to visit clinics and hospitals, and thus easing such pressure on our
health facilities.

If all this was done, someone told me, many doctors wouldn't choose to
go on missions, which would affect one of the primary sources of foreign
exchange for the government.

This notion is the state-centric, market-driven vision that focuses on
worker's being exploited abroad – a view that predominates in medicine,
tourism, biotechnology and other sectors that are hyper-prioritized for
investment given the revenue they bring in to the state.

This is a philosophy that has slowed the development of other areas of
the economy and entire regions of the country to the point of
impoverishing them. What's more, this idea has commercialized and driven
the emigration of our most important productive force: skilled workers.

The changes outlined here would upend the orientation of medicine,
currently aimed more at the goals of the bureaucratic state (e.g.
obtaining more foreign exchange through internationalist labor and
presenting good statistics for a good public image) than solving
specific health problems defined by the people themselves or for the
good of specialists, who would be better paid. Overall, everyone would
be more involved in the solutions.

"Without that hard currency, we couldn't have the health system we
have," says the bureaucrat.

It's true. We would have another one — a better one — and it too would
seek sources of hard currency, but it would be less profit-oriented than
the state's present system. Can anyone say exactly how much money has
come into Cuba through this system and how and where it has been used?
Guidelines 110 and 111 of the Communist Party's reform document of the
Sixth Congress partially addressed this issue.

Moreover, in continuation, there would be fewer opportunities for the
"brain drain." With improved living conditions, many young professionals
wouldn't leave, they would have their children here and our population
would not continue declining and aging.

Indeed, population aging is the most serious strategic health problem
that we are experiencing (if we look at health care in its broadest
conception: beyond pills, injections, operations, exercise, hygiene and
nutrition) because it involves the gradual extinction of the Cuban
population, a problem whose roots are being ignored by the state, for
obvious reasons.

The state is reducing social benefits and, at the same time, is
retaining the bulk of the billions paid by foreign governments and
businesses for the work performed abroad by of our doctors and other
professionals, musicians, artists and athletes. If other opportunities
for developing their skills and earning a decent living are not given to
everyone equally, we will see the continuation of defections (the
"betrayals" and "treachery"), embezzlement of resources, family
divisions and other social problems in general.

Therefore the exorbitant taxes imposed on public health care workers and
on all other professionals for providing services abroad should be
reduced, thereby enabling them to produce or freely associate on their own.

Ethics and Quality

Medical ethics is embodied in the quality and humanism of the service
provided, not what the doctor does or doesn't charge for their work. If
an operation that costs $10,000 in the US is "free" in Cuba, this is due
to the low pay received by all medical personnel and the devaluation
that the national currency has undergone precisely because of the meager
pay provided to the workforce, which of course is the element that adds
value to goods and services.

As long as the workforce is poorly paid, there will be no abundant or
excellent products. This economic law is as valid for beans as it is for
medical services.

The government must assume these necessary changes in a consistent and
comprehensive manner. It must resolve the problem of the dual currency.
Likewise, it needs to respect the value of the labor force (firstly the
rights of the worker, what the "trade unions" have forgotten) and free
all constraints on self-employment and cooperativism in all areas –
breaking with the inertia, red tape and bureaucracy.

This snail's pace of change and lack of comprehensiveness only benefit
immobilism and the full private capitalist restoration – extremes that
provide mutual support and do everything they can to prevent a real
socialist breakthrough in Cuba.

—–

1- Marx. Critique of the Gotha Program, Progress Publishers, Moscow.
"Vulgar socialism (and from it in turn a section of the democrats) has
taken over from the bourgeois economists the consideration and treatment
of distribution as independent of the mode of production and hence the
presentation of socialism as turning principally on distribution."
2- Marx. Capital. Volume III. Chapter 51, Chapter 51. Distribution
Relations and Production Relations. "The distribution relations
essentially coincident with these production relations are their
opposite side, so that both share the same historically transitory
character… The so-called distribution relations, then, correspond to and
arise from historically determined specific social forms of the process
of production and mutual relations entered into by men in the
reproduction process of human life. The historical character of these
distribution relations is the historical character of production
relations, of which they express merely one aspect."

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