Quote:
Originally Posted by CyberSEO
He didn't pay anything like Obamacare. Otherwise, the government have paid him the money for being a disabled (he had no work). Moreover, the government has paid the money to his sons as well, even when they were 18+. My friend has bought his first car (a shitty old Lada 2101) for the money he was paid by the government as a son of a disabled man. That was the evil Soviet Union...
In the USA the process seems to be much more optimized. You take the money for Obamacare and send them to... nowhere. After that you ask a citizen to pay for the treatment which doesn't treat and after that, you send a police squad to eliminate the problem. That's extremely cool and very effective!
|
ruskie is the last mother fucker to be pointing his finger at USA healthcare.
Russia: The Sickness of a Nation
December 21, 2016
BY CHANEY KALINICH
The probability that a 15-year-old boy in Russia will die before he reaches the age of 60 is greater than 40%.1 The ongoing health crisis in Russia presents a frightening picture of a nation’s leaders undermining its own citizens’ lives through neglect, corruption, and a quest for power. Russia is a wealthy country with vast resources at its disposal—an estimated 40% of the world’s natural resources—but these riches have limited benefit for its citizens’ health.1 Typically, a country’s overall health improves with industrialization and increased wealth, but male life expectancy in Russia is 13 years shorter than that of its counterparts around the world.2 Russia is widely regarded as one of the world’s superpowers, yet it suffers from HIV infection rates higher than most developing countries, and one of the highest rates of alcoholism in the world. Russia’s massive public health problems result from complex and deep-seated societal norms paired with a government that has demonstrated inadequate interest in fixing them.
References:
Chelala, C. (2012, December 23). Russia’s Demographic and Public Health Crisis. Common Dreams. Retrieved from
All Views Articles for 2012-12-23 | Common Dreams.
Life Expectancy at Birth, Russian Federation (2013). World Health Organization. Retrieved from
WHO | Russian Federation.
Danton, C. (2007). The Health Crisis in Russia. Topical Research Digest: Human Rights in Russia and the Former Soviet Republics, 43-50. Retrieved from
http://www.du.edu/korbel/hrhw/resear...sia/russia.pdf
Chirkunov, O. (2013). Management of Motives in Health Care. Problems of Economic Transition, 55(12), 66-67. doi:10.2753/PET1061-1991551208.