Sunday, December 18, 2011

On money and healthcare: Rights & Priorities - Part 3/3

As a doctor you often see people in a very vulnerable state of health walk into your room. Your job is to provide some sort of health care to that person. It is a paid job just like anyone else’s job for which they trained and invested time, effort, and money. Why any of us decided to become doctors and not hairdressers, teachers, politicians, carpenters, etc., is different for everyone and that is not the point. The point is we are workers same as anyone else doing any job. You do the job for a certain amount of hours, you get paid for doing that job, and then the money is yours to do as you wish. That’s the essence of working in a capitalist, democratic country like Australia and the U.S.A. regardless of what your job actually entails, right?

The doctor is a bit like a hairdresser or an accountant or a lawyer or a politician in that he doesn’t physically sell you a product, but rather a service. A patient walks in, you carry out an assessment, work out what he needs, and advice or give that treatment required. Patients don’t leave the room with a new bag filled with products they’ve purchased, but the same thing happens once you leave your hairdresser or accountant – and yet you are aware you need to pay for the service provided to you. And yet you could say that the service provided to you is at least a little more essential than a haircut or advice about things other than your health. One of these things could potentially be the difference between life and death. I have never heard of anyone who risked death by having long or unkempt hair…

So here is the dilemma I wanted to get to: health, or the access to health care is an essential human right; it is a right every human being regardless of who they are or what they possess deserves for the simple act of having being born human. In countries where there is widespread poverty and having no money really means having no money (i.e. none to spare on food or clothing or housing, and not just meaning poor as in having no money for a tv, a car, a haircut, a holiday, or entertainment, etc.), having a right to free access to health care is one of the great achievements of humanity.

So why am I singling out ‘poor’ countries as separate to developed countries like Australia? Because in developed countries like Australia, we believe that if we can’t afford a holiday or a car or costly entertainment that we are poor. And we don’t want to miss out on these things! To a person in a wealthy country like this, we believe that these things are our rights too - and God forbid that we miss out on these things to pay for what we now consider non-essentials, such as our health care. And that is the cause of the dilemma in wealthy countries: we have for the most part changed our priorities as to what is considered essential and non-essential. Yet we all have a sense of what our human rights are. I will tell you that in Australia we see time and time again people who hesitate and complain about having to pay an out-of-pocket fee to have their health tended to, but will without hesitation hand over large amounts of money for haircuts, for manicures, for holidays, for fancy cars, for video games, movies, etc. And yet, only one of these things could potentially be the difference between life and death…

I don’t know what the right answer is. And I don’t know what the best system of health care is. Surely everyone deserves the right to access health care regardless of what they have or who they are or what they do with their lives. Yet, surely, we have also come to some concerning conclusions when tending to our health is considered less of a priority than funding our non-essential commodities. Personally, I have only ever considered the doctor’s role as equivalent to the mechanic’s, to fix the machine so the machine can go where it chooses and do what it chooses. Doing our job doesn’t make us special people, we just do a special task. But it is a job same as being a mechanic is a job - and in this society, a job implies compensation. Doctors eat too and pharmaceutical companies are not charities, so the reality of it is that health care has become a business. It’s not ideal, but it is the reality.

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