Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Being denied health care ...

I'm pretty sure I'm the only one who checks and reads my blog but what the heck. Maybe one day other people will read it. Anyway, check out this article. It's really sad. What I find so strange though is that people complain about health care in America but in Egypt (and in a lot of other countries) health care is so much worse. I know of so many people who were diagnosed and treated incorrectly in Egypt. I mean sure it happens in the u.s. also, but in Egypt, if you were misdiagnosed at least you will get an apology and you can even sue the hospital/doctor. But in Egypt ... wazza hell? Yeah that doesn't work. Come one Egypt, you can do it. Just be fair in your treatments, doctors, and hospitals, don't deny people who can't afford health care. Imagine if you or one of your family members didn't have enough money to get treated, wouldn't it be nice if someone treated you for free?

2.2 million poor Egyptians were given free treatment in 2009


End of free health care hits Egypt’s poor hardest


Millions of poor Egyptians with no health insurance bear brunt of government’s empty coffers.


CAIRO - Hesham Gohary says he has been coming to the Health Ministry in central Cairo for weeks in the hope of getting free kidney dialysis treatment, but always leaves empty-handed.

The 54-year-old farmer is one of 35,000 low-income kidney failure patients whose collective US$118 million health bill used to be footed by the government, until it recently declared its coffers empty.

“I badly need the dialysis,” Gohary told IRIN. “But it seems so difficult to get free treatment in this country these days.”

Around 35 million of the country’s 80 million people are in the state health insurance system, according to the Health Ministry, and most of the rest are supposed to get free health care.

Those seeking free treatment must make their case at a Health Ministry office and, if successful, receive an official letter authorizing public hospitals to treat them for free. The hospitals then reclaim payment from the ministry.

Last year, the government gave free treatment to 2.2 million poor Egyptians, including kidney failure, cancer, diabetes and high blood pressure patients, according to Mohamed Abdeen, chairman of the Specialized Medical Councils, the part of the Health Ministry which determines whether a patient qualifies for free treatment or not.

This is a problem of money. The hospitals can’t do anything else. If they don’t get money, they won’t be able to offer treatment or medicine for these people.

“A problem of money”

But the government has incurred debts of US$219 million to hospitals and is no longer able to pay its health bills, and since mid-December 2009 hospitals have stopped treating the patients it sends to them.

“This is a problem of money,” Abdeen told IRIN. “The hospitals can’t do anything else. If they don’t get money, they won’t be able to offer treatment or medicine for these people.”

Gohary used to receive kidney dialysis treatment 12 hours a week at a cost to the government of $3,302 a year - a small fortune for him.

“I really can’t pay for my treatment. And it’s hard for me to work because repeated dialyses have made my body frail,” he said.

The Health Ministry says around 700,000 high blood pressure and diabetes patients used to receive free health care at an annual cost of $183 million; and around 25,000 cancer patients cost the government $51 million annually.

Egypt's economy grew by 7.1 percent in 2007, 7.2 percent in 2008 but just 4 percent in 2009, according to the government. Independent analysts say the loss to the economy because of the global financial crisis is bigger than the government is willing to admit.

Meanwhile, individuals like Gohary are facing the consequences: “I suffer bleeding every time I undergo the dialysis… This costs me 300 pounds [$55] in medication every month. This money and the cost of the dialysis are too big for my sons to be able to pay.”

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