

A
Socialist Vision of Health Care in a World Out of Balance
by Norma Turner
As socialists we continue to defend the NHS but we need to ask “what
are we defending?”
The NHS
The founding principles of the NHS we support and hold onto. These
were: equitable, universal health care free at the point of use,
financed on the basis of people’s ability to pay through progressive
taxation. Providing health services would neither be an opportunity
to make money nor a charity. To provide a comprehensive, universal,
equitable service, the organisation and funding needed to be integrated
across the country.
Unfortunately, right from the conception of the NHS, compromises
meant these principles could never be fully achieved. Financial
restraints meant that only hospitals were included, making it a
service for sickness rather than health. GP surgeries, dentists,
opticians, community pharmacists were left as private concerns linked
to but not accountable to the NHS. Ambulance services, community
health, prevention, child health and public health were the responsibility
of local authorities. Distinction was made between health and social
care. Within the NHS the power of the consultants ensured mental
health and geriatric services were marginalised. But the worst compromise
was that private health care was allowed to run alongside the NHS.
These compromises have provided the private corporations with a
way in to public funding; and successive governments have helped
this process. This current Labour Government has been by far the
worst, and most inexcusable. Their project is one of changing the
NHS from a public service with some semblance of democratic accountability
into a full health care market.
In my opinion this process is now beyond the point of no return;
it will be fully in place within the lifetime of this Government.
The general public will not feel the effects for a few years because
the private health care industry is not interested in a purely private
market. Its interests lie in becoming for-profit providers in a
basic health system funded out of taxation while also providing,
for additional fees, a higher quality of service for those who can
afford it.
As socialists we can remind people of the founding principles. Before
the NHS, the system had only served the rich and the rest lived
in fear of ill health. Now people have no experience of a time before
the NHS and therefore it is harder to convince them of its importance.
But there is an increasingly unwilling public appetite for the privatisation
of everything from private armies, prisons, probation, transport,
housing, education, health and social services, water, and on it
goes to include the air we breathe. We can link the opposition to
what is happening to the health service to the anti-capitalist struggle
against the rush to privatise to make the rich richer and the poor
poorer across the globe.
A Socialist Alternative
To link these struggles we also have to link our vision. A socially
responsible programme of community health care cannot be run outside
of a socialist context. I think we can find inspiration and ideas
by looking to Cuba.
Article 49 of the Socialist Constitution of the Republic of Cuba
states:
“Everyone has the right to the care and protection of their
health. The state guarantees this right: by offering free hospital
and medical services…; by offering free dental treatment;
by developing plans for sanitary efforts, health education, periodic
medical exams, general vaccination, and other preventive medical
means. In these plans and activities the entire population participates
through the social and mass organisations.”
This commitment is achieved through a nationally integrated system
of public health in which social legislation about its application
is unified with the training programmes of the workers. Public health
is integrated with social welfare. Family planning is free, abortion
is available on demand. There is a nationalised pharmaceutical industry,
a high doctor to patient ratio, and no-one is without access to
a doctor either geographically or financially.
Every
GP lives in the community they serve, they are highly trained and
chosen for training not just on academic achievement but more importantly
social criteria. The doctors are part of community activities addressing
environmental problems, sources of community stress, e.g. bad housing,
family dynamics. They also are involved in organising social, sporting
and fun events. There are political structures which enable the
whole community to participate in making life decisions around what
the community needs and wants.
This works because people are educated from nursery school throughout
their whole lives, about health issues, including physical, psychological,
social and political aspects needed for a healthy person, and because
they develop an obligation to their community. Any health service
requires people to adhere to principles of co-operation, equality,
self-government and individual freedom.
In Britain the biggest providers of health and social care are not
health and social service professionals, it is mothers and carers
who provide over £87 billion worth of unpaid care a year.
Long term health depends on strengths of social networks, family
structures and economic self-sufficiency. We need a system for instilling
values in our young people – of caring and sharing, for community
aspirations and involvement in civil society. This requires a high
level of education and an understanding and commitment against discrimination,
because of class, race, sex, sexual orientation, age and disability.
The current provision of health and social care defines people by
what they lack or need and has resulted in people losing a sense
of what they have to give, thus becoming inhumane to others.
Children
in Cuba learn that the person beside them is healthy if they are
kind to each other. Here in this country children learn to grab
what they can for themselves, resulting in increased mental illness
and suicide among young people.
A World Out of Balance
The other vital consideration in creating a vision of health is
tackling global warming. We live in a world out of balance. Thanks
to climate change and the results of the free market, we will be
faced with both new diseases and old diseases re-emerging.
Already because of increased poverty and poor housing there is an
increase of tuberculosis and rickets. Climate change causing floods
and testing an ageing sewage system will see the return of enteric
water-borne diseases. Also insects will thrive due to global warming
in places they previously did not live. We have more mosquitoes
and in time malaria will be introduced. We have already seen blue
tongue disease in animals from midges. Other bacteria, viruses,
fungi, parasites will appear, causing disease in humans, plants
and animals, threatening the eco-system. Any future discussion on
health must be set in the context of strategies of environmental
activists.
In conclusion a National Health Service can only be realised within
a socialist ideology within which structures of organisation are
developed to involve the participation of everyone in the needs
of their own communities, linking education and health with environmental
issues within an international perspective against global capitalism.
Easy – we start with nationalising the pharmaceutical industry.

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