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Greek Health System Opts for Amputation as Money-Saver – AOI – The American Orthodox Institute – USA

Greek Health System Opts for Amputation as Money-Saver

This is what happens with technocrats in control.

This Saturday, one of Greece’s most respected newspapers, To Vima, reported that the nation’s largest government health insurance provider would no longer pay for special footwear for diabetes patients. Amputation is cheaper, says the Benefits Division of the state insurance provider.

The new policy was announced in a letter to the Pan-Hellenic Federation of People with Diabetes. The Federation disputes the science behind the decision of the Benefits Division. In a statement, the group argues that the decision is contrary to evidence as presented in the international scientific literature.

Greece’s National Healthcare System was created in the early 1980s, during the tenure of Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou. Papandreou, an academic, won election under the slogan, Αλλαγή, which is the Greek word for Change.


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8 responses to “Greek Health System Opts for Amputation as Money-Saver”

  1. If ObamaCare is allowed to stand and America continues down the path to socialized medicine fully controlled by the gov’t, this is the future awaiting us all. Rationing is the only solution left once gov’t bureaucrats are in charge and the people have to depend on politicians to decide what health care they can have. This is the ultimate result of socialist/communist medical systems. It’s the same story all over again.

    Any gov’t program or state bureaucracy will ALWAYS be 5x worse than any private company individually, and 100x worse than the entire private sector with multiple competitors.

    1. George Michalopulos

      Can anyone say “death panels”?

  2. Andrew

    Lets turn the clock back to the EP’s speech at the Center for American Progress where he discussed the issue of healthcare and how Byzantine/Greek Society was a exemplar of healthcare. Here is a quote from that speech:

    …..it is clear that we owe the Byzantines the development of the modern institutions we call hospitals. But what may be more important, we owe to them the view that every member of society, from the greatest to the least, deserved the best quality healthcare available at the time. This is obviously relevant today, and as the U.S. debates the best way to provide healthcare for its citizens, we hope and pray that the Byzantine-Orthodox approach provides a model worthy of emulation.

    You have to wonder what the EP and the folks at 79th Street will say to the image of Greek doctors butchering the weak to save a few euros. Maybe the Office of Church and Society will address this issue………….

    1. Harry Coin

      So much attention to nuance in the words. Indeed people do ‘deserve’ so many things. Getting that done for real is another story. What is a ‘no abortion’ person willing to offer the pregnant woman considering her first abortion? her second? her third? her fourth? her fifth? her sixth? What does she deserve?

  3. Harry Coin

    Here’s a link to the original story:

    http://www.tovima.gr/default.asp?pid=2&ct=1&artid=359513&dt=09/10/2010

    For those non-Greek readers, here’s what google translate came up with:

    The Social Security does not issue specific to diabetic footwear
    Saturday, October 9, 2010
    IKA shows callous towards people with diabetes who are at risk of amputation of lower limbs. This liability insurance does not provide for special treatment diabetic shoes because “… not avoid amputation of the leg, just delayed for a couple years and the expected benefit would be less than the estimated cost. The phrase contained in a letter sent by the officers of the Benefits Division of the Department of Social Security Sickness Benefit the Panhellenic Federation of Associations, People with Diabetes.

    In a statement the federation stated that therapeutic shoes are essential and necessary preventive measure in people with diabetes are at high risk for amputation. It also emphasized that the response of the Special Committee’s Social Security no scientism, after conflicts with the valid international bibliographic data and financial studies κόστουςαποτελεσματικότητας in the diabetic foot, and the instructions and exhortations of the World Health Organization, International Diabetes Federation, etc. .

    Representatives of the federation noted that the administration of therapeutic footwear diabetes, coupled with the establishment of diabetic foot clinics in hospitals could dramatically reduce the thousands of amputations in people with diabetes.

  4. cynthia curran

    Byzantine health system was interesting. It had a lot of private charity but emperors also helped start hosptials which would be the state treasury. However, even with the emperors backing it the church ran the health care, a faith based system. Also, according to Procopius until the plague, the state paid doctors in the larger cities to care for people during half the year. I’m not certain if this can be done in a modern setting.

  5. In Greece there are things that can’t work right…

  6. Harry Coin

    Apropos development:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/15/world/europe/15greece.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1

    ATHENS — Antonios Avgerinos, 59, a retired army pharmacist, always wanted his own pharmacy here. And why not? Greek law ensures that pharmacists get a 35 percent profit on all drugs sold, even over-the-counter medications.

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