sabato 10 marzo 2012

Italy's health meltdown


in: 
Forty-five thousand fewer beds and overall hospital capacity reduced by 15 per cent, 12-hour waits in A&E and serious staff shortages. These are the headline results of official Italian figures covering the past decade that have been analysed by Il Fatto Quotidiano newspaper.
The picture in big cities is the most serious with health services "close to collapse" in Rome, Turin and Naples, according to data studied by the paper.
The number of beds per 1,000 inhabitants has fallen from 5.1 to 4.2 in 12 years, leaving Italy well below the European average of 5.5 beds per 1,000 inhabitants.
Cuts in hospital capacity were supposed to be balanced by the expansion of non-acute "community" services under reforms pursued over the past decade, but this has not materialised.
Increased waiting times for public health services and a cut in capacity have seen in increase in the use of private clinics in 12 out of the country's 20 regions. The public health system has seen a 17 per cent cut in capacity compared to 5.3 per cent for the private sector. Severe cuts over the past 15 years have gone hand in hand with healthcare reforms that granted powers to regional administrations to spend centrally provided funds as they saw fit. This resulted in a freeze on hiring healthcare workers, the use of an increasingly casualised workforce and healthcare shopping whereby people who are able to travel to the best facilities, creating a postcode lottery of care.
The reforms also allowed a big expansion in state-funded private providers. For example, Veneto region, run by the extreme right-wing Northern League, splashed out €200 million of taxpayers' money over a four-year period to private clinics. Private clinics, some of which have church links, are also a key target for investment from organised crime and there has been a number of high-profile financial scandals linked to them.
The country spends 9% its gross domestic product on healthcare, putting it behind Britain, France and Germany.

Tom Gill blogs at revolting-europe.com  The photograph, by paco, shows a public clinic in Sicily. 

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