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Europe
The Price Of EU Membership: Healthcare Rationing For Elderly In Italy, Spain
2020-04-12
[GatestoneInstitute] In addition to the ethical questions raised by the rationing of healthcare according to age, the denial of medical attention to the elderly, many of whom have paid into the social welfare system all their lives, also casts a spotlight on the shortcomings of socialized medicine in Southern Europe,
where austerity measures imposed by the European Central Bank have resulted in massive budget cuts for public healthcare.
In documents leaked to several Spanish media, the Catalan Emergency Medical Service (Servicio de Emergencias Médicas) instructed doctors, nurses and ambulance personnel to inform the families of older patients suffering from coronavirus that "death at home is the best option." ... The protocol also advised medical personnel to avoid referring to the lack of hospital beds in Catalonia.

"My father started working at the age of 14 until he was 65. He never asked for anything. On March 18, he needed a respirator to avoid dying and was denied.... This is the Spain we have. My father's generation built this country, its reservoirs, roads, agriculture, working 14 hours a day, coming out of a postwar period. And they are being left to die." ‐ Óscar Haro, YouTube video, March 20, 2020.

In November 2019, two months before the coronavirus first appeared in Spain, the Spanish government revealed that nearly 700,000 patients were on a waiting list for surgeries. Nationwide, patients had to wait on average 115 days to receive surgery; in Catalonia, patients had to wait nearly six months; in Madrid patients had to wait for six weeks.
The severity of the coronavirus crisis in Italy and Spain, where elderly patients are being allowed to die for the benefit of the young, is due in large measure to the austerity measures associated with their membership in the eurozone. The large numbers of dead, especially among the elderly, appears to be the price that Italians and Spaniards are paying to be part of a monetary union which they never should have joined.

Posted by:Clem

#3  All those years that Italy, Greece, and Spain were spending considerably more than they were taking in, what were they spending the money on? Did the citizenry benefit from that spending in ways that did not end up paying for hospitals and medical staff, as opposed to it all being skimmed off by politicians and senior bureaucrats? Because if so, those now being triaged are the ones who chose this result all along the way.
Posted by: trailing wife   2020-04-12 22:05  

#2  Remember, a lifetime of productive, non criminal existence does nothing for your social credit score...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-04-12 13:27  

#1  This what the socialized medicine death panels everyone mocked look like. This is exactly what Democrats here are proposing that once the workers have been tax farmed for a lifetime they are due a modest golden age and then discarded.
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2020-04-12 13:21  

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