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SUBJECT 12. OUTPATIENT MEDICAL SERVICE
When I lived in the Soviet Union,
бесплатная медицинская помощь
[byes-'plat-na-ya mye-di-'tsin-ska-ya 'po-mashch] "free medical service" was
something everybody took for granted. It was just natural. And it was one of those
attractive features of Soviet life which were
constantly used by official
propaganda to demonstrate the advantages of the socialist system over the
capitalist one.
To tell the truth, it was quite a significant advantage. However, not having
an opportunity to experience anything else, many Soviets (myself included)
wrongly believed that if we paid for medical treatment (as people in the West did),
we would have much better service. I said "wrongly" because living in the West I
realized that the Russian saying
"
Что дорого - то мило, что дёшево - то
гнило" ("Everything expensive is good, everything cheap is rotten") cannot be
applied to outpatient medical service. On the contrary, in this particular
case the
opposite is true (at least from the patient's point of view). However, please read
the following Russian text, which explains how that service was
organized in
Russia, and then draw your
own conclusions,
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