For the
last several years, Greece has been going through a protracted and damaging
economic crisis that has had profound consequences on the health of the Greek
people. The economic crisis has predominantly impacted the health of vulnerable
populations with a rise in suicides and deaths due to mental and behavioral
disorders.
Rather than promoting more protection for
the poor in critical situations, the “Troika” (European Commission, European
Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund) has forced the Greek
government to adopt austerity policies that will inevitably lead to reduced
access to basic human services, particularly among the poor.
The economic crisis has not been equally
harmful to other sectors of society. For example, while those with higher
incomes seem to have some protection from suicides in times of crisis, economic
downturns create conditions of greater vulnerability. This is also due to
increased dysfunction of the mental health services, seriously affected by the
crisis. There is, in that regard, a paradoxical situation in which mental
health services are less effective when they are most needed.
Although historically Greece had one of the
lowest suicide rates in the world, recent years have seen a dramatic increase
in their number. “The passage of new austerity measures in June 2011 marked the
beginning of significant, abrupt and sustained increases in total suicides and
male suicides,” reports a 2015 British Medical Journal study. Overall,
attempted suicides have increased by 36 percent between 2009 and 2011, and
there has also been a parallel increase in the prevalence of people with major
depressive disorders.
The increasing number of injecting drug
users (IDUs) has resulted in rising numbers of people with human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections, who have also been impacted by
disruptions of preventive programs. Between 2009 and 2012, the number of new
HIV infections among drug users rose from 15 to 484. According to the Lancet,
the cases of tuberculosis in this population more than doubled between 2012 and
2013.
Greek hospitals are also on the brink of
collapse. Government health spending fell 25 percent between 2009 and 2012, and
spending on drugs dropped by 32 percent since 2010. Public hospitals have had
to drastically cut their budgets, in some cases by as much as 50 percent,
firing staff, cutting back on testing kits and supplies, and abstaining from
hiring new doctors to replace those who have retired or have left the country.
Health coverage has been affected by
cost-cutting measures. Because health care in the country is linked to
employment status or social security plans, rising unemployment levels and
government social security cuts have left many people without health insurance.
In addition, many middle income people who had private coverage are now turning
to state hospitals. The influx of new patients is putting extra pressure on the
already overburdened health care staff.
Greece, which was one of the countries with
the highest rate of physicians per population in the world, has seen a mass
exodus of health professionals to rich countries with fewer doctors. In Athens
alone, some 4,000 doctors have left the city since the crisis began and
spending cuts were imposed on the health sector, according to reports from the
city’s medical association. There is also a high number of top scientists who
have left the country.
The exodus of doctors has been aggravated by
the shortage of drugs and medical supplies, as a result of drug companies’
suspension of supplies because of unpaid bills.
In addition, it is estimated that a third of
graduate nurses will remain unemployed for up to four years after graduation,
while emergency nurses are working overtime and with fewer resources.
Increases in certain illnesses, such as
heart attacks and respiratory problems, are associated with the chronic stress
suffered by Greeks and worsening living conditions engendered by the crisis.
Not surprisingly, measures of self-rated health have also consistently fallen
throughout the crisis. As a group of Greek scholars warned the government in an
open letter, “You have no right to obtain credit by degrading the health of
your compatriots and by sending to an early grave the most vulnerable among
us.”
Πηγή:
theepochtimes.com
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