Tuesday, July 19, 2011

In Venezuela, Price Controls have Resulted to a Shortage of Doctors

In Venezuela price controls has not only brought widespread shortages in many goods at worst it has been causing doctors to flee.

From the eloquent Mary O’ Grady of Wall Street Journal

Yet it is in health care where Venezuelans are feeling the inflation pain most. Hospital services are up 39.7% year over year, doctor and paramedic services are up 21.5%, and the cost of medicines and medical equipment has risen 17.4%.

These cost increases refer, of course, to private clinics and goods that are not subject to price controls. Wherever prices can't be raised, both quality and supply are deteriorating rapidly...

In its 2010 annual report, the ministry of health acknowledged the shortage of doctors, particularly in specialties such as anesthesiology, neonatal care, cardiovascular surgery, neurosurgery and child cardiology. Private hospitals are also deteriorating now as the poor turn up for care with government medical insurance, but the insurer doesn't fulfill its obligation to pay.

The government has admitted that a large number of doctors have fled, but it says it's not worried. More than 25,000 Venezuelan students are now enrolled in Venezuela's new Bolivarian medical schools or in medical schools in Cuba. Unfortunately the curriculum is not public, and Venezuelans are worried that the students spend more time studying revolutionary politics than anatomy. Mr. Chávez seems to understand this, if nothing else. His surgeon hails from Spain

That’s the magic of socialism: equality in hardship.

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