An unforeseen health scare and stay in the hospital in today's Camino a Ítaca. Public healthcare systems around the world are under attack and without extreme vigilence, many countries could soon wind up like the United States. All's it takes is a vote in the right direction. Click over to read originally published version in Spanish or read the English translation below. (PDF en castellano abajo)
We were looking out the
wide picture windows when my friend Jill turned to me and said, “It’s like
we’re on an ocean liner but instead of the sea we’re sailing across dehesa and golden
steppe.” And it was true the modernist building sort of projected itself over
the savannah-like landscape towards the fringe of blueish mountains in the
distance.
The view was extraordinarily
beautiful, but the situation certainly wasn’t. I had been admitted to the new hospital
in Caceres with something rather serious and painful and I had been taking
refuge for several days in my incredible view from the area where you would
have expected to see another patient’s bed as I awaited the results of test
after test. The thoroughness and professionality of the entire staff was truly remarkable.
The camaraderie and the general care was outstanding. Their pride in their work
showed in every little thing they did.
“I immediately fell in
love with this landscape on the train ride in more than thirty years ago,” Jill
recalled, “it’s as far away from my northern English moors that you can get,
but it still gave me a similar peace.” And I knew exactly what she meant, the
view outside the window was an entirely different landscape from that I grew up
with seeing the great plains of Canada running off towards the immense pine
forests that crowd the skirts of the Rocky Mountains, but there was some sort
of symbiosis between the three open landscapes.
Spain does so many things
well, from its gastronomy, to sport, to its tolerance and generosity. There are
so many things that this country can be proud of. But perhaps one of its most impressive
achievements is something that many simply take for granted: its healthcare
system. Spain punches above its weight in many things, like its patrimony and
tourism, but it’s its healthcare system that few, if any country can challenge.
And that’s what confuses
me.
So much national
indignation is immediately raised when there is a perceived slight towards an
institution the nation cherishes, like when someone abroad throws chorizo inwith their paella. But where is this damaged pride, this generalized outrage at
the clear and ongoing attempts to dismantle the public healthcare system?
It takes a special kind of
evil to provoke conflicts and sell arms to each side, privatize access to water
or sabotage public healthcare systems, but I hope there is an even more special
place in purgatory designated for public officials who deliberately underfund public
institutions to justify their gradual privatization.
But how do they get away
with this?
Simple really. People
don’t necessarily vote in their own interests. They lead more with their
identity and their desire to be associated with an elite who can afford private
care. It’s intertwined with that instinctual conservative aversion to the word
public, to the idea that someone they believe ‘inferior’ to them can actually
enjoy the same rights.
Jill and I both knew about
the disaster that continual cutbacks and privatization brought about in our respective
countries. It’s time to make the healthcare system the new paella and defend it
with the same energy and zeal.
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