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The Real Cost of Healthcare Cuts

Greece’s health crisis is worsening as a result of continued healthcare budget cuts. Can the rest of Europe learn from it?

Apicture of a nurse by Charlotte Jarvis @ Waag Society

HIV, Tuberculosis, Depression, Suicide, Increases in infant mortality.

Greece feels the effects of cuts in healthcare funding.

ARE YOU LISTENING, David Cameron? Do you really think cuts SAVE money (or do you just see human misery as collateral damage in the push to drop a long-term timebomb on the next government)?


Greece’s health crisis is worsening as a result of continued healthcare budget cuts, says a new study published in the medical journal, The Lancet. Researchers say the harmful effects of austerity are linked to the increasing inability of patients to access the health system, large rises in the incidence of infectious disease, and a deterioration in the overall mental health of Greek people.

Largest cutbacks to the health sector

The authors from the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine find that Greece has had the largest cutbacks to the health sector seen across Europe, as the bailout package capped public expenditure at 6% of GDP. For example, from 2009 to 2011, the public hospital budget was reduced by over 25%. Greece’s public spending on health is now less than any of the other pre-2004 European Union members.

Lead author of the study, Alexander Kentikelenis of Cambridge University, said: ‘The data reveals that the Greek welfare state has failed to protect people at the time they needed support the most. A rapidly growing number of Greeks are losing access to healthcare from budget cuts and unemployment.’

Austerity’s severe impact on health

Senior author Dr David Stuckler from the University of Oxford said: ‘The Greek government –along with their European partners – appears to have been in denial about austerity’s severe impact on health. The cost of austerity is being borne mainly by ordinary Greek citizens, who have been affected by the largest cutbacks to the health sector seen across Europe in modern times. We hope this research will help the Greek government mount an urgently needed response to these escalating human crises.’

At a time of increasing health need and falling incomes, Greece’s bailout agreement stipulated shifting the cost of healthcare to patients. The Greek government introduced new charges for visits to outpatient clinics and higher costs for medicines. General health services were also eroded, says the paper.

The authors’ analysis of the latest available data from the EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions revealed a 47% rise in people who felt they did not receive medically necessary healthcare. This increase was linked to a rising inability to afford care and the costs of travel to access health services, according to the authors. Rapidly increasing unemployment since 2009 meant a growing number of people no longer had any form of health cover, with an estimated 800,000 without unemployment benefits or the ability to access health services.

The paper details signs of the nation’s deterioration in health including:

HIV incidence has risen in injecting drug-users more than 10-fold from 2009 to 2012
Tuberculosis incidence among injecting drug users more than doubled in 2013
State funding for mental health decreased by 55% between 2011 and 2012
Major depression increased 2.5-fold between 2008 and 2011
Suicides increased by 45% between 2007 and 2011
Infant mortality jumped by 43% between 2008 and 2010

The proportion of children at risk of poverty increased from 28 in 2007 to 30% in 2011

Ring-fencing health and social budgets

The authors note that experiences of other countries that have overcome financial crises, such as Iceland and Finland, suggest that by ring-fencing health and social budgets, governments can avoid some of the harmful effects of crisis taking their toll on the health of their populations. Apicture of a nurse by Charlotte Jarvis @ Waag Society

The study concludes that the Greek health-care system was in grave need of reform before the crisis, but the scale and speed of imposed change limited its capacity to respond to its population’s increased health needs.

The authors conclude: ‘The foundations for a well functioning health-care system need structures that are accountable and coordinated — not denialism. These findings suggest that the people of Greece deserve better.’

Source: University of Oxford
Photo: Charlotte Jarvis @ Waag Society

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