Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Dog Days of European Socialized Medicine
The Dog Days of European Socialized Medicine
May 10, 2025 9:57 AM

In August, the Wall Street Journal Europe published an article exploring the difference in health care received by domesticated animals and humans. (see “Man Vs. Mutt: Who Gets the Better Treatment?” in WSJ Europe, August 8, 2009) The editorialist, Theodore Dalrymple (pen name for outspoken British physician and NHS critic, Dr. Anthony Daniels) argued that dogs and other human pets in his country receive much better routine and critical healthcare than humans: their treatment is “much more pleasant than British humans have to endure.”

Dalrymple outlines just why this is so: pets in the U.K. actually have it better than their owners since: a) they receive immediate treatment with no waitlists or postponed operations “(and) not because e first”; b) there is no fear that somehow they are being denied the proper treatment for economic reasons: there is “no tension, no feeling that one more patient will bring the whole system to collapse…; (no one is) terrified that someone is getting more out of the system than they.”; and c) pets in veterinary facilities have more options and flexibility for choosing a healthcare practitioner: “if you don’t like him, you can pick up your leash and go elsewhere.”

British humans, on the other hand, have to deal with navigating the rapids and swells of NHS bureaucracy, which requires the skills of a “white-water canoeist”. They must also endure interminable wait-times for prostheses and life-improving operations. Often they receive sub-standard administrative services, nursing assistance and meal provisions.

As President Obama continues to promote a Europeanization of the American healthcare model, the WSJ Europe editorialist beckons us to listen to such howling in the twilight of the Old Continent’s rapidly aging nationalized healthcare systems. Part of this howling is caused in the less dignified forms of public health services and treatment of human patients. Yet, there is plenty of loud barking over the mismanagement and abuse within nationalized healthcare across Western Europe, particularly in terms of mishandling budgets and sources of revenue.

The looming failure of European nationalized healthcare can be spelled out in some facts and stories from around Europe. Below are some examples of cracks within the systems of five prominent economies: the United Kingdom, France, Spain, Germany and Italy.

UNITED KINGDOM (Source: Association of American Physicians and Surgeons)

Stuck in Ambulances: “To meet government targets, which require emergency department patients to be treated within 4 hours, thousands of patients are kept in ambulances outside the department for hours. Last year, more than 43,000 patients waited for more than an hour before being allowed into the emergency room.Ambulances that are being used as “mobile waiting rooms” are unavailable to take fresh calls.”

Unworthy Patients: “British patients are being denied certain operations because of lack of worthiness, based on smoking, obesity, heavy drinking, or age. Officials are urging patients to turn to “self care” instead of physician visits. The threat to cut benefits to the old and the unhealthy in Britain is a clear confirmation that health care can never be free…. The threat also shows that health care can’t be truly universal, at least not for the long term, because it es too costly to maintain as such.”

No Private Subsidies: “One way to relieve strains on the system is to allow patients to pay privately for portions of their care—while still receiving “basic” care from the NHS. For example, patient Debbie Hirst, who (had) metastatic breast cancer, was attempting to raise $120,000 to pay for Avastin, a drug widely used in the U.S. and Europe but not available to NHS patients, at least not until the cancer is so widespread that treatment may be hopeless. Such arrangements have tacitly been allowed before, but in this case the doctor delivered the news that he was getting his wrists slapped by the higher-ups. If the patient paid for Avastin, she’d have to pay for all of her treatment—far more than she could afford… “

FRANCE (Source: David Gauthier-Villars “French Woes Color U.S. Health Debate”, in WSJ Europe, Aug. 7, 2009)

Rising Annual Shortfalls: “France spends 11% of national output on health pared with 17% in the U.S…The problem (is) Assurance Maladie has been in the red every year since 1989. This year the annual shortfall is expected to be €9.4 billion ($13.6 billion), and €15 billion in 2010, or roughly 10% of its annual budget.”

Reimbursements Only for Cost of Generics: “In recent years, Assurance Maladie has focused on reducing high medicine bills….France’s national health insurer is promoting the use of cheaper generic drugs, penalizing patients when they don’t use them by basing reimbursements on generic-drug prices.”

SPAIN (Source: “Health and Policy Planning“, 14 (2): 164-173, Oxford University Press, 1999)

Limited Professional Freedom for Physicians: “In 1985. the PSOE government passed a bill to prevent physicians from holding two full-time jobs (in the public and private bined), or more than one job in the public sector. The implementation of the so-called bill of patibilities’ took place amidst a bitter battle between the government and the medical organizations, which considered it a direct attack on their professional freedom’. In addition, the government has tried to control the growing number of physicians by introducing barriers of entry into the admission requirements for medical schools.”

Feigned Illness: “In (public) outpatient clinic and ambulatories, plain that 75% of those who seek care are not ill. It seems that people distressed by personal and/or socioeconomic circumstances are using primary care centres for relief of symptoms that, while not related to medically defined illnesses, are equally disabling to the optimal functioning of the individual.”

GERMANY (Source: Simon Gabar’s Reforming Germany’s health care system: The question of keeping solidarity)

More Exams, More Doctors Earn: “(One) factor on the doctors’ side contributing to the health care systems problems is the way the doctor’s salary is calculated. Doctors are paid for each examination: the more they do, the more money they accumulate. So far, ideas to stop the collectively based system of negotiations between the physicians’ and the health insurance providers has not been changed; since the doctors’ side seems not to be willing to end their ways to get the money.”

Monopoly Among Medical Suppliers: “Another factor contributing to increasing costs in the health care system is medicine producers. Some medicine seems to be more expensive in Germany than in other countries. The market acts like a monopoly where participants do not have to fear market pressures–everyone dealing with medicine receives its own share if the expensive medicine is sold–and paid by the collective.”

ITALY (Source: Michael Day’s: “Mafia corruption puts Italian healthcare system in ’state of emergency'”” for Mafia and ANSA newswire service.)

Health Care Influenced by Bribes, Political Corruption (ANSA): “Abruzzo Governor Ottaviano Del Turco was arrested Monday [ July 14, 2008 ] in connection with an alleged public health scam in the eastern Italian region. Del Turco, 63, a former Socialist trade union leader and ex-finance minister, was arrested with nine others on suspicion of fraud, corruption, embezzlement and money laundering involving some 14 million euros. Del Turco is suspected of taking a bribe of almost six million euros, police sources said. As well as the 11 people arrested, 25 others were placed under investigation for suspected kickbacks. Most of the officials involved are members of the Democratic Party (PD), Italy`s largest opposition party. Del Turco, one of Italy`s most prominent former Socialists, is a member of the PD`s 45-strong national council. After a career in trade unionism Del Turco rose to the top of Bettino Craxi`s Socialist Party before it was swept away in the Bribesville scandals of 1992-94. He stayed on the centre left and served as head of parliament’s Anti-Mafia Commission between 1996 and 2000, when he was named finance minister.”

Public Healthcare Rife With Mafia Ties ): “The Mafia has been accused of bleeding Italy’s health system dry, following a series of deaths linked to the crumbling state of hospitals in the south of the country. The Governor of the Calabria region, Agazio Loiero, today closed wards and declared a ‘state of emergency’ in his health system. He is calling on state intervention bat corruption, boost treatment standards – and prevent further needless deaths. The latest victim, 16-year-old Eva Ruscio, died at the Vibo Valentia Hospital on 5 November (2007) just two days after a routine tonsil operation. A confidential report into health system’s missing millions by the Guardia di Finanzia, the police attached to Italy’s finance ministry, is said to conclude that the mob hasn’t simply infiltrated the Vibo Valentia Hospital – it effectively runs it.…According to senator Ignazio Marino, who is leading a parliamentary investigation at the request of health minister Livia Turco into events at the hospital, “a lack of adequate equipment” played a part in Eva’s death. But according to leading mafia observer, Francesco Grignetti, writing in La Stampa newspaper, “the thing that plagued Eva has a precise name: ‘Ndrangheta’ [the feared Calabrian crime syndicate].” “In Calabria, healthcare absorbs 80 per cent of public funding; it’s obvious that ‘Ndrangheta is going to be involved,” he said. Several other managers have faced similar charges….Around 100 more are still thought to be employed by the region’s hospitals, however….The mob creams off most of the money by ensuring that lucrative contracts go panies it runs or owns – often in exchange for poor quality goods or services, or sometimes nothing at all.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
It’s Friday—but Sunday’s comin’
memoratesthecrucifixion of Jesus and his death at Calvary, the most significantly tragic event in human history. But as pastorS.M. Lockridge(1913-2000) reminds us in this brief Easter meditation, the darkness of this historical Friday pales parison to the light es on Sunday morning. It’s Friday Jesus is praying Peter’s a sleeping Judas is betraying But in’ It’s Friday Pilate’s struggling The council is conspiring The crowd is vilifying They don’t even know That in’ It’s Friday The disciples are running Like...
Pontifical professor: Capitalism ‘improved the living conditions of all social levels’
A few months ago, a group of protesters decided to vent their frustration by screaming into the sky. Trying to encourage theologians to understand the fundamentals of economics before preaching about the subject sometimes feels just as productive. However, one of the secular media have recognized the efforts of one of the foremost Catholic exponents of the free market. Fr. Martin Rhonheimer, a professor of ethics and philosophy at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome, shared his...
How the principle of ‘eye for an eye’ advanced human equality
“An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind” is a claim frequently attributed to Mohandas Gandhi. But while the quote might fit the attitude of a non-violent civil rights leader, it misses how the concept of “eye for an eye” changed the world for the better. The phrase “eye for an eye” is taken from passages in the Old Testament that refer to what is often called thelex talionis, the “law of retaliation.” While it sounds harsh, it...
Why are some countries richer than others?
Note: This is post #73 in a weekly video series on basic economics. Mexico is wealthier than Central African Republic, and the United States is much wealthier than Mexico. Why is this true? Why do some countries have wealth that is 10 to 100 timesmore than another country? Why can some citizens in one country purchase so many more goods and services than people in a neighboring country? In this video by Marginal Revolution University,Alex Tabarrok answers those questions and...
Toward a Godly globalization
Globalization is routinely decried for its disruptive effects, particularly as it relates to the health of our social relationships munity enterprises and institutions. Even as it’s proven to drive significant economic growth, questions remain about its steamrolling influence on the culture and society. But what about the opportunities? In a lecture at the Faith@Work Summit, Tim Liu, a healthcare administrator and CEO, reminds us of the potential for a “Godly globalization,” noting that amid the disruptive effects, we also see...
Adam Smith on the causes—and cures—of crony capitalism
“For Adam Smith, crony capitalism fails on two grounds,” says Lauren Brubaker. “It is unjust, favoring a few at the expense of the many, and it is destructive of the desired end of political economy—economic growth.” Brubaker says Smith’s writings can help us properly frame the problems of crony capitalism, understand the causes, and formulate solutions for preventing or mitigating the corruption of free markets: For Smith, the tendencies to cronyism, which are anchored in human nature, can be tempered...
Radio Free Acton: Justice in taxation, How entrepreneurs make a freer society, and Upstream on ‘A Wrinkle in Time’
On this episode of Radio Free Acton, Kevin Schmiesing, research fellow at Acton, speaks with Robert Kennedy, professor in the department of Catholic Studies at the University of St. Thomas, on ‘Justice in Taxation.’ Then, Caroline Roberts talks with Brett VanderKamp, founder and president of New Holland Brewing Company on how entrepreneurs make a freer society. Finally, on the Upstream segment, Bruce Edward Walker discusses the life and work of Madeleine L’Engle with Sarah Arthur, author of a new biography...
Why we should learn how to ‘kill American democracy’
During the Cold War, the U.S. military would conduct wargaming simulations in which some units would act as the United States (the blue team) and some would pretend to be Soviet troops (the red team). Through such exercises the military discover the weak points in their strategy before they were exposed bat situations. Over the years, the term “red teaming” came to be used to describe this practice of viewing a problem from an adversary petitor’s perspective. The military and...
Taxation and Catholic Social Teaching
“Tax policies and tax levies are an unavoidable part of civilized life,” says Robert G. Kennedy in this week’s Acton Commentary. “The social tradition of the Church emphasizes the duty of citizens to support their government as well as the duties of civil authorities to govern wisely and to respect the ownership rights of individuals and families.” Kennedy outlines five things the tradition Catholic social teaching teaches us about taxation and four things it does not. What the Tradition teaches:...
Study: How overregulation is stifling the food truck revolution
As protestors continue to boldly decry “corporate greed” with little definition or discernment, progressive policymakers are just as quick to push a range of wage controls and market manipulations to mitigate the supposed vices of free and open exchange. The painful irony, of course, is that the victims of such policies are not the fat-cat cronyists at the top, but the scrappy challengers at the bottom. We’ve seen it with the recent embrace of the $15 minimum wage, which continues...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved