The Sovietization of Medical Care

Guest Post by Jeffrey A. Tucker

Soviet health care

 

My good friend professor Yuri Maltsev died this week and I’ve spent these mourning days recalling our conversations. He was a leading economist in the old Soviet Union, as the top advisor to Mikhail Gorbachev’s chief economist. He defected in 1989 before the Soviet Union fell apart. We became fast friends just after he landed in DC, and we spent a year or more together collaborating on many projects.

He was a font of amazing stories about how things really worked in the Soviet Union. Contrary to what US economists were claiming until the very end, it was not a rich country with mighty industrial achievements. It was a poor country where nothing worked. There were no replacement parts for most machines including tractors. He doubted that there would ever be a nuclear exchange simply because most Soviet workers knew that the bombs were all for show. If they ever dared press the button, they would most likely blow themselves up.

As the systems of command and control in those states fell apart (Russia, East Germany, Romania, Poland, Czechia, and so on), Yuri was in a position to advise the reforms. To his sadness and contrary to his advice, even though the parties and leaderships collapsed, there was almost no attempt to reform the health-care sectors of these countries. They left them all in place while focusing on things like heavy industry and technology sectors (and here banditry took over).

Yuri saw this as tragic because, to his mind, the corruption of health care in the Soviet Union was central to the disastrous quality of life that the people experienced there. Though doctors were everywhere and minted daily, people who were sick could hardly get effective treatment at all. Most of the best therapeutics were homegrown. People would only go to the doctor much less the hospital if they had no other options. This is because the instant you entered the system, your personhood was left behind and you became part of the modeling target.

All health care was driven by statistical goals, just as with economic production. Hospitals were under strict orders to minimize death or at least not to go over target. That led to a perverse situation. Hospitals would take in the mildly sick but refuse to admit anyone likely to die. If patients in critical care declined too rapidly, the first priority of the hospital was to get them out before they died so as to reduce the amount of death on the premises.

All of this was done in the hope of gaming the vital statistics to make it look like the centralized and socialized health-care systems worked when they clearly did not.

None of this could ultimately hide the vital statistics, which, Yuri explained, truly do tell the story. From 1920 to 1960, life expectancy did increase dramatically though never quite reaching asat high as the US. But after 1960, it began to decline even as it was rising more and more in the US and in non-communist countries around the world. This continued until the regime finally collapsed, at which point life expectancy began to rise again.

Notice too that life expectancy in both countries has begun to fall again, and dramatically, following pandemic lockdowns and mass vaccination, which is a tragedy that cries out for explanation.

Back to Yuri’s point however: the health-care system and its statistical goals served as a major source of brutality and corruption in Russia. When government gets hold of medical systems, they use them for their own propaganda ends and purposes. That’s true whether the real goals are medical or not.

This happened in both countries following lockdowns, and many others as well. Maybe it is only a short blip or maybe it is the beginning of a long trend of decivilization. Either way, the central plan is not working.

In the US, in nearly every state, regardless of whether the virus was spreading rapidly with significant medical consequences, hospitals were forcibly reserved only for emergencies and Covid patients. Elective surgeries were out of the question, as were cancer screenings or other routine checkups. This left most hospitals in the country with very few patients and a gutting of their profitability models, leading to furloughs of thousands of nurses during a pandemic.

It also created a situation in which hospitals were desperate for a revenue source. By government legislation, a subsidy was provided to them for Covid patients and Covid deaths, thus incentivizing medical institutions to classify everyone with a positive PCR test as a Covid case, regardless of what else was wrong with the patient.

This began almost immediately. Here is Deborah Birx speaking to the issue on April 7, 2020.

This practice continued for two years, leading to a massive confusion about how many people actually died of Covid and skewing all existing data on the case fatality rate. Leana Wen of CNN argued in a Washington Post article that now perhaps only 30% percent of the people labeled as a Covid hospitalization really are that. She explained further in a CNN interview.

As Leslie Bienen and Margery Smelkinson note in the Wall Street Journal:

Under the federal public-health emergency, which begins its fourth year on Friday, hospitals get a 20% bonus for treating Medicare patients diagnosed with Covid-19. … Another incentive to overcount comes from the American Rescue Plan of 2021, which authorizes the Federal Emergency Management Agency to pay Covid-19 death benefits for funeral services, cremation, caskets, travel and a host of other expenses. The benefit is worth as much as $9,000 a person or $35,000 a family if multiple members die. By the end of 2022, FEMA had paid nearly $2.9 billion in Covid-19 death expenses.

Further, doctors all over the country are facing massive pressure to list as many deaths as possible as Covid deaths.

These programs create a vicious circle. They establish incentives to overstate the danger of Covid. The overstatement provides a justification to continue the state of emergency, which keeps the perverse incentives going. With effective vaccines and treatments widely available, and an infection fatality rate on par with flu, it’s past time to recognize that Covid is no longer an emergency requiring special policies.

Maltsev was right about this as with so much else. The further we move away from health care as essentially a doctor/patient relationship, with freedom of choice on all sides, and the more we allow central plans to replace on-the-ground clinical wisdom, the less it looks like quality health care and the less it contributes to public health. The Soviets already tried this path. It did not work. Health-care by modeling and data targeting: we tried it over the last three years with horrible results.

As Maltsev would put it, the need to de-Sovietize medical care applies in every country, then and now.

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16 Comments
kfg
kfg
February 17, 2023 6:24 pm

“It was a poor country where nothing worked. ”

I have a Soviet made can punch. It’s an interesting design (which I presume was made necessary by the low quality of the metal), but it doesn’t punch cans for shit. Even simple tools didn’t work.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  kfg
February 17, 2023 7:56 pm

I have a Soviet WWII era bolt action rifle, and numerous rounds of ammo from the same time period. It punches holes reliably in all kinds of shit. Jus sayin’.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
February 18, 2023 8:14 am

compare the gap between most any western-made object from those good old days, and the soviet counterpart from the same era… with the enormous chasm between both of them and the chinamart garbage flooding the world in the past decade!

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Anonymous
February 18, 2023 2:08 pm

Well … history has proven those Kalashnikov can punches to be very effective in all sorts of situations …

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
  kfg
February 18, 2023 10:51 am

The AK-47 sure does work.

B_MC
B_MC
February 17, 2023 6:56 pm

In Russia….

Hospitals were under strict orders to minimize death or at least not to go over target.

In Amerika….

Hospitals were under strict orders to maximize death or at least not to go under target.

Steve Z.
Steve Z.
February 17, 2023 8:54 pm

“With effective vaccines and treatments widely available”
WTF?
Hey Jeff, the “vaccines” are a bioweapon kill shot.
I just finished watching a Geert Vanden Bossche video. The worst is yet to come. Those “vaccinated”(70% of US pop) will succumb to ADE (antibody dependent enhancement). Of this he is “200%” sure.
Those “vaccinated” better have Ivermectin/HCQ available.
Those unvaxxed should also have a supply even though each new variant is an immune system update for them.

Euddolen ap Afallach
Euddolen ap Afallach
  Steve Z.
February 18, 2023 9:37 am

Antibodies and viruses live only in the fairy tale delusions of the corrupted medical mind.

m
m
February 18, 2023 5:03 am

Yawn.
Half the article is every-single-thing in the Soviet Union was maximally bad, with a cherry on top as reinterpreting/bullshitting the Russian life expectancy curve as proof when the biggest drop occurred after the USSR had broken apart in 1991.

And for the rest talking about US response to Covid, without ever mentioning Russia any more on that topic.

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
February 18, 2023 6:35 am

The Medikill “system” is whatever the B3RG* says it is, comrades.

flash
flash
  Aunt Acid
February 18, 2023 7:02 am

B3RG* ?

zappalives
zappalives
February 18, 2023 6:38 am

Yeah…………things have been fucked up since the democrat party cancelled the human immune system.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  zappalives
February 18, 2023 8:10 am

Warp speed

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 18, 2023 8:07 am

Right. This also belies the myth of the greedy hospital administrator and uncaring doctors and nurses. This was economic survival created by government edict. This was the plan to survive the crisis (that was also created by government via the biosecurity mission). Our government sucks to put it mildly.

Walt
Walt
February 18, 2023 8:23 am

the need to de-Sovietize medical care applies in every country, then and now

Reeeeeeeeee! That’s antisemitisms!! Reeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!

Obbledy
Obbledy
February 18, 2023 9:47 am

The”Soviet Union”didn’t collapse,it was abandoned….
The Bolsheviks saw the writing on the wall and moved over here after many years of laying the groundwork…..
Society has been nudged to the left for so long,we don’t recognize the ground we’re standing on anymore…. Not an accident!Senator Joe was right!,so right his history has been practically erased from the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD!….
It’s just what Bolsheviks do…..