Healthcare in Russia
Healthcare in Russia is provided by the state through the Federal Compulsory Medical Insurance Fund, and regulated through the Ministry of Health.[1] The Constitution of the Russian Federation has provided all citizens the right to free healthcare since 1996. In 2008, 621,000 doctors and 1.3 million nurses were employed in Russian healthcare. The number of doctors per 10,000 people was 43.8, but only 12.1 in rural areas. The number of general practitioners as a share of the total number of doctors was 1.26 percent. There are about 9.3 beds per thousand population—nearly double the OECD average.
Expenditure on healthcare was 6.5% of Gross Domestic Product, US$957 per person in 2013. About 48% comes from government sources. About 5% of the population, mostly in major cities, have voluntary health insurance.[2]
After the end of the Soviet Union, Russian healthcare became composed of state and private systems. Originally, state healthcare was greatly inferior, while pricier private facilities provided better-quality healthcare. The state healthcare system greatly improved throughout the 2000s, with health spending per person rising from $96 in 2000 to $957 in 2013.
Due to the ongoing Russian financial crisis since 2014, major cuts in health spending have resulted in a decline in the quality of service of the state healthcare system. About 40% of basic medical facilities have fewer staff than they are supposed to have, with others being closed down. Waiting times for treatment have increased, and patients have been forced to pay for more services that were previously free.[3][4]
History
Tsarist era
The Medical Sanitary Workers Union was founded in 1820. Vaccination against smallpox was compulsory for children from 1885.[5] The Russian Pharmacy Society for Mutual Assistance was founded in 1895. [6]
The healthcare conditions in Tsarist Russia have been considered "appaling".[7] In 1912, an interdepartmental commission concluded that 'a vast part of Russia has as yet absolutely no provisions for medical aid'.[8] The All Russia League of Struggle Against Venereal Disease estimated that there were 1.5 million sufferers in 1914.[9] 10% of those recruited to the army had tuberculosis.[10] Expenditure on healthcare at that time amounted to 91 kopeks per head of population. There were ten factories in Moscow with their own small hospital in 1903 and 274 had medical personnel on their site. From 1912 legislation encouraged the establishment of contributory hospital schemes. Before 1914 most medical supplies, dressings, drugs, equipment and instruments had been imported from Germany. During the war mortality of the injured was very high. Most died from sepsis but more than 16% from typhus.[11] As many as 10,000 doctors conscripted to the army died between 1914 and 1920.
Early Soviet period
The Bolsheviks announced in 1917 that ”comprehensive sanitary legislation" is required, as well as clean water supply, national canalisation and sanitary supervision over commercial and industrial enterprises and residential housing.[12] The All—Russia Congress of Nurses Union was founded in 1917 and in 1918 had 18,000 members in 56 branches.[13] The Peoples Commissariat of Labour announced a broad and comprehensive list of benefits to be covered by social insurance funds in October 1917, including accident and sickness, health care,and maternity leave, but funding, which was supposed to come from employers was not available.[14] By December 1917 benefits were restricted to wage earners. Social insurance was re-organised as a five-tier sickness and accident benefit scheme which in principle included healthcare and medical treatment by October 1918. There were continuing problems in collecting contributions from employers which continued at least until 1924.
In 1918 the Commissariat of Public Health was established. A Council of Medical Departments was set in Petrograd. Nikolai Semashko was appointed People's Commissar of Public Health and served in that role until 1930. It was to be “responsible for all matters involving the people’s health and for the establishment of all regulations (pertaining to it) with the aim of improving the health standards of the nation and of abolishing all conditions prejudicial to health” according to the Council of Peoples Commissars in 1921.[15] It established new organisations, sometimes replacing old ones: the All Russia Federated Union of Medical Workers, the Military Sanitary Board, the State Institute for Social Hygiene, the Petrograd Skoraya Emergency Care, and the Psychiatry Commission.
In 1920 the world's first state rest home for workers was created, followed in 1925 by the world's first health resort, in Yalta, for agricultural workers. [16]
Most pharmacies and pharmaceutical factories were nationalised in 1917 but it was not a uniform process. In 1923 25% of pharmacies were still privately owned. There was heavy reliance on imported medicine and ingredients. 70% of all pharmaceuticals and 88% of drugs were produced locally by 1928. Local pharmacy schools were established in many cities.[17]
In 1923 there were 5440 physicians in Moscow. 4190 were salaried state physicians. 956 were registered as unemployed. Low salaries were often supplemented by private practice. In 1930 17.5% of Moscow doctors were in private practice. The number of medical students increased from 19,785 in 1913 to 63,162 in 1928 and 76,027 by 1932.[18] When Mikhail Vladimirsky took over the Commissariat of Public Health in 1930 90% of the doctors in Russia worked for the State.
There were 12 bacteriological institutes in 1914. 25 more were opened in the years up to 1937, some in the outlying regions such as the Regional Institute for Microbiology and Epidemiology in South East Russia which was based in Saratov. The emergency service, Skoraya Medical Care, revived after 1917. By 1927 there were 50 stations offering basic medical aid to victims of road accidents and accidents in public places and responding to medical emergencies. The Scientific Practical Skoraya Care Institute opened in 1932 in Leningrad running training courses for doctors. 15% of the emergency work was with children under 14. [19]
Spending on medical services increased from 140.2 million rubles per year to 384.9 million rubles between 1923 and 1927, but funding from that point barely kept up with population increases. By 1928 there were 158,514 hospital beds in urban areas. 59,230 in rural areas, 5,673 medical centre beds in urban areas and 7,531 in rural areas, 18,241 maternity beds in urban areas and 9,097 in rural areas. 2000 new hospitals were built between 1928 and 1932. Gosplan projected health spending to be 16% of total government budget in 1929.[20]
Semashko system
Soviet Russia had a totally socialist health care model—the Semashko system with a centralized, integrated, hierarchically organised with the government providing state-funded health care to all citizens. All health personnel were state employees. Control of communicable diseases had priority over non-communicable ones. On the whole, the Soviet system tended to primary care, and placed much emphasis on specialist and hospital care. The Semashko model has been considered as a "coherent, cost-effective system to cope with the medical necessities of its own time".[21]
The integrated model achieved considerable success in dealing with infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, typhoid fever and typhus. The Soviet healthcare system was successful in providing Soviet citizens with competent, free medical care and contributed to the improvement of the nation's health condition.[22] The effectiveness of the model declined with underinvestment, with the quality of care beginning to decline by the early 1980s, though in 1985 the Soviet Union had four times the number of doctors and hospital beds per head compared with the USA.[2] The quality of Soviet medical care became low by developed world standards. Many medical treatments and diagnoses were unsophisticated and substandard (with doctors often making diagnoses by interviewing patients without conducting any medical tests), the standard of care provided by healthcare providers was poor, and there was a high risk of infection from surgery. The Soviet healthcare system was plagued by shortages of medical equipment, drugs, and diagnostic chemicals, and lacked many medications and medical technologies available in the Western world. Its facilities had low technical standards, and medical personnel underwent mediocre training . Soviet hospitals also offered poor hotel amenities such as food and linen. Special hospitals and clinics existed for the nomenklatura which offered a higher standard of care, but which was still often below Western standards.[23][24][25]
Despite a doubling in the number of hospital beds and doctors per capita between 1950 and 1980, the lack of money that had been going into health was patently obvious. Some of the smaller hospitals had no radiology services, and a few had inadequate heating or water. A 1989 survey found that 20% of Russian hospitals did not have piped hot water and 3% did not even have piped cold water. 7% did not have a telephone. 17% lacked adequate sanitation facilities. Every seventh hospital and polyclinic needed basic reconstruction. Five years after the reforms described below per capita spending on health care was still a meagre US$158 per year (about 8 times less than the average European social models in Spain, the United Kingdom and Finland, and 26 times less than that of the U.S. which spent US$4,187 at that time).[26]
Reform in 1991–1993
The new Russia has changed to a mixed model of health care with private financing and provision running alongside state financing and provision. Article 41 of the 1993 constitution confirmed a citizen's right to healthcare and medical assistance free of charge.[27] This is achieved through compulsory medical insurance (OMS) rather than just tax funding. This and the introduction of new free market providers was intended to promote both efficiency and patient choice. A purchaser-provider split was also expected to help facilitate the restructuring of care, as resources would migrate to where there was greatest demand, reduce the excess capacity in the hospital sector and stimulate the development of primary care. Finally, it was intended that insurance contributions would supplement budget revenues and thus help to maintain adequate levels of healthcare funding.
The OECD reported[28] that unfortunately, none of this has worked out as planned and the reforms have in many respects made the system worse. The population’s health has deteriorated on virtually every measure. Though this is by no means all due to the changes in health care structures, the reforms have proven to be woefully inadequate at meeting the needs of the nation. Private health care delivery has not managed to make many inroads and public provision of health care still predominates.
The resulting system is overly complex and very inefficient. It has little in common with the model envisaged by the reformers. Although there are more than 300 private insurers and numerous public ones in the market, real competition for patients is rare leaving most patients with little or no effective choice of insurer, and in many places, no choice of health care provider either. The insurance companies have failed to develop as active, informed purchasers of health care services. Most are passive intermediaries, making money by simply channelling funds from regional OMS funds to healthcare providers.
According to Mark Britnell the constitutional right to healthcare is "blocked by opaque and bureaucratic systems of planning and regulation", reimbursement rates which do not cover providers costs and high levels of informal payment to secure timely access. There is a "mosaic" of federal and state level agencies responsible for managing the public system.[2]
Recent developments
Starting 2000, there was significant growth in spending for public healthcare[29] and in 2006 it exceed the pre-1991 level in real terms.[29] Also life expectancy increased from 1991–93 levels, infant mortality rate dropped from 18.1 in 1995 to 8.4 in 2008.[30] Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin announced a large-scale health care reform in 2011 and pledged to allocate more than 300 billion rubles ($10 billion) in the next few years to improve health care in the country.[31] He also said that obligatory medical insurance tax paid by companies for compulsory medical insurance will increase from current 3.1% to 5.1% starting from 2011.[31]
In May 2012 Putin signed the May Decrees which included a plan to double the wages of healthcare staff by 2018 and gradual privatisation of state health services. In November 2014 the wage rises in Moscow led to the closure of 15 hospitals and 7,000 redundancies.[2]
Private health care coverage
The private health insurance market, known in Russian as voluntary health insurance (Russian: добровольное медицинское страхование, ДМС) to distinguish it from state-sponsored Mandatory Medical Insurance, has experienced sustained levels of growth, owing to dissatisfaction with the level of services provided by state hospitals.[32] It was introduced in October 1992.[33] Perceived advantages of private healthcare include access to modern medical equipment and shorter waiting lists for specialist treatment.[32] Private health insurance is most common in the larger cities such as Moscow and St Petersburg, as income levels in most of Russia are still too low to generate a significant level of demand.[32]
Revenues for the leading private medical institutions in the country reached €1 billion by 2014, with double-digit levels of growth in the previous years.[34] As a result of the financial crisis in Russia, the proportion of companies offering health insurance fell from 36% to 32% in 2016.[35] The number of people covered by a voluntary healthcare policy in Moscow was 3.1 million in 2014, or 20.8% of the population.[36]
For the most part, policies are funded by employers, though insurance can also be purchased individually.[32] Another important market for insurers are immigrant workers, who are required to purchase health insurance to obtain work permits.[37] The average yearly cost of an employer-sponsored scheme ranged from 30,000 to 40,000 rubles ($530 - $700) in 2016, while prices for individuals were about 30% higher.[37] Critical conditions, such as cancer or heart disease, are often excluded from entry-level policies.[37]
The Russian health insurance market is oriented towards large companies, with corporate clients accounting for 90% of all the policies.[38] Small and medium-sized enterprises are far less likely to provide healthcare.[37] Some companies choose to offer health insurance only to selected categories of employees.[35]
Most of the individuals who buy health insurance are related to people covered by employer-sponsored schemes, with the rest accounting for less than 2% of all policies.[39] As companies cut back on their healthcare policies, employees in some cases resort to buying them individually.[39]
The largest private healthcare provider by revenue is Medsi,[34] whose main shareholder is the Sistema conglomerate.[39] Foreign healthcare providers with a presence in Russia include Fresenius, which has a network of dialysis centers in the country.[34] Fertility and maternity clinics are an important element of the Russian private healthcare network. The Mother and Child network of clinics accounts for 9% of all IVF treatment cycles in the country.[39]
Leading providers of healthcare insurance in Russia included Sogaz, Allianz, RESO-Garantia, AlfaStrakhovanie as well as the formerly state-owned Rosgosstrakh and Ingosstrakh.[40] RESO-Garantia is unusual among large insurance companies in that individual customers account for 40% of the policies.[39] Some insurance companies, such as Ingosstrakh, also own a network of clinics.[41]
Since 1996 government health facilities have been allowed to offer private services, and since 2011 some private providers have been providing services to the state-insured. The private sector in Moscow has expanded rapidly. One chain, Doktor Ryadom, treats half its patients under the official insurance scheme at low cost and the other half privately at a profit.[2]
Pro-natal policy
In an effort to stem Russia's demographic crisis, the government is implementing a number of programs designed to increase the birth rate and attract more immigrants to alleviate the problem. The government has doubled monthly child support payments and offered a one-time payment of 250,000 Rubles (around US$10,000) to women who had a second child since 2007.[42]
In 2006, the Minister of Health Mikhail Zurabov and Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee for Health Protection Nikolai Gerasimenko proposed reinstating the Soviet-era tax on childlessness, which ended in 1992.[43] So far, it has not been reinstated.[43]
In 2007, Russia saw the highest birth rate since the collapse of the USSR.[44] The First Deputy PM also said about 20 billion rubles (about US$1 billion) will be invested in new prenatal centres in Russia in 2008–2009. Immigration is increasingly seen as necessary to sustain the country's population.[45] By 2010, number of Russians dropped by 4.31% (4.87 million) from the year of 2000, during the period whole Russia’s population died out just by 1.59% (from 145.17 to 142.86 million).[46]
See also
- Health in Russia
- Mental health in Russia
- Timeline of healthcare in Russia
- Russian Ministry of Health
- Abortion in Russia
- Russian Medical Fund
References
- ↑ Popovich, L (2011). "Russian Federation: Health system review" (PDF). Health Systems in Transition. 13 (7). ISSN 1817-6127. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Britnell, Mark (2015). In Search of the Perfect Health System. London: Palgrave. pp. 81–84. ISBN 978-1-137-49661-4.
- ↑ "In Putin’s Russia, Universal Health Care Is for All Who Pay". Bloomberg.com. 13 May 2015. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
- ↑ http://www.jamestown.org/single/?tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=42927&no_cache=1#.V5RZTqIlrIU
- ↑ Introduced in the 1810s. Kan, Sergei: Memory Eternal, p. 95
- ↑ Khwaja, Barbara (26 May 2017). "Health Reform in Revolutionary Russia". Socialist Health Association. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
- ↑ Leichter, Howard M.: A Comparative Approach to Policy Analysis: Health Care Policy in Four Nations, p. 202
- ↑ Leichter, Howard M.: A Comparative Approach to Policy Analysis: Health Care Policy in Four Nations, p. 204
- ↑ http://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/venereal_diseases
- ↑ Schaeffer Conroy, Mary: The Soviet Pharmaceutical Business During the First Two Decades (1917-1937), p. 32
- ↑ Schaeffer Conroy, Mary: The Soviet Pharmaceutical Business During the First Two Decades (1917-1937), p. 32
- ↑ Keshavjee, Salmaan and Farmer Paul: Blind Spot: How Neoliberalism Infiltrated Global Health, p. 28
- ↑ Sigerist, Henry Ernest and Older, Julia:Medicine and Health in the Soviet Union, p. 77
- ↑ Dewar, Margaret: Labour Policy in the USSR, 1917-1928, p. 166
- ↑ Sigerist, Henry Ernest and Older, Julia:Medicine and Health in the Soviet Union, p. 25
- ↑ Lazebnyk, Stanislav I︠U︡khymovych and Orlenko, Pavlo: Ukraina V Voprosakh i Otvetakh, p. 139
- ↑ See also, Schaeffer Conroy, Mary: The Soviet Pharmaceutical Business During the First Two Decades (1917-1937).
- ↑ Sigerist, Henry Ernest and Older, Julia:Medicine and Health in the Soviet Union, p. 53
- ↑ Se also, Abramovich Messel' Meer and Fogarty John: Urban emergency medical service of the city of Leningrad, pp. 5-7
- ↑ Khwaja, Barbara (26 May 2017). "Health Reform in Revolutionary Russia". Socialist Health Association. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
- ↑ OECD: The Social Crisis in the Russian Federation, p. 95
- ↑ Leichter, Howard M.: A Comparative Approach to Policy Analysis: Health Care Policy in Four Nations, p. 226
- ↑ Dyczok, Marta: Ukraine: Movement Without Change, Change Without Movement, p. 91
- ↑ Davis, C.M. and Charemza, W.: Models of Disequilibrium and Shortage in Centrally Planned Economies, p. 447
- ↑ Eaton, Katherine Bliss: Daily Life in the Soviet Union, p. 191
- ↑ WHO: World Health Report 2000
- ↑ "The Constitution of the Russian Federation".
- ↑ "HEALTHCARE REFORM IN RUSSIA: PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT WORKING PAPERS No. 538". The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Retrieved 12 November 2016.
- 1 2 "Public Spending in Russia for Healthcare" (PDF).
- ↑ "Russian State Institute of Demography".
- 1 2 "Putin says Russia needs major health care reform".
- 1 2 3 4 "ДМС в России - добровольное медицинское страхование - MetLife". MetLife (in Russian). Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- ↑ "За медуслуги платят более половины российских горожан". Vedomosti. 24 October 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
- 1 2 3 "Рейтинг РБК: 25 крупнейших частных медицинских компаний России". РБК. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- 1 2 "Все меньше компаний приобретают полисы ДМС для сотрудников – НАФИ". 4 August 2016. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- ↑ "РБК Исследования рынков . В 2014 г. численность пациентов ДМС в Москве составила 3,1 млн человек". marketing.rbc.ru. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 "Анализ рынка ДМС в России в 2011-2015 гг, прогноз на 2016-2020 гг, BusinesStat, 2016 - РБК маркетинговые исследования". marketing.rbc.ru. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- ↑ "Куда идти прикрепиться". Газета РБК. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Спрос на платные медицинские услуги растет". 9 November 2015. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- ↑ "В Петербурге составили рейтинг страховщиков, работающих в системе ДМС.". Страхование сегодня. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- ↑ "«Ингосстраху» требуются пациенты". Коммерсантъ (Омск). 20 January 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
- ↑ "Country Profile: Russia" (PDF). Library of Congress—Federal Research Division. October 2006. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
- 1 2 "Childless Russian families to pay taxes for their social inaction," http://english.pravda.ru/russia/economics/15-09-2006/84467-childless-0 (accessed January 3, 2010.)
- ↑ "Russian policies ignite unprecedented birth rate in 2007". The Economic Times. February 2, 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
- ↑ "United Nations Expert Group Meeting On International Migration and Development" (PDF). Population Division; Department of Economic and Social Affairs; United Nations Secretariat. 6–8 July 2005. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
- ↑ "Росстат опубликовал окончательные итоги переписи населения". РБК. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
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