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Death Rate Drops During Doctor Strike
The June 10, 2000 issue of the British Medical journal reports on an
interesting statistic that has occurred in Israel. It seems that three months
ago physicians in public hospitals implemented a program of sanctions
in response to a labor dispute over a contract proposal by the government.
The article stated that the Israel Medical Association began an action in March
to protest against the treasury's proposed imposition of a new four year wage
contract for doctors. Since then, the medical doctors have cancelled hundreds of
thousands of visits to outpatient clinics and have postponed tens of thousands
of elective operations.
To find out whether the industrial action was affecting deaths in the
country, the Jerusalem Post interviewed non-profit making Jewish burial
societies, which perform funerals for the vast majority of Israelis.
Hananya Shahor, the veteran director of Jerusalem's Kehilat Yerushalayim burial
society said, "The number of funerals we have performed has fallen
drastically." Meir Adler, manager of the Shamgar Funeral Parlour,
which buries most other residents of Jerusalem, declared with much more
certainty: "There definitely is a connection between the doctors
sanctions and fewer deaths. We saw the same thing in 1983 when the Israel
Medical Association applied sanctions for four and a half months."
In response Avi Yisraeli, director general of the Hadassah Medical
Organization, offered his own explanation, "Mortality is not the only
measure of harm to health." He goes on to say that, "Elective
surgery can bring about a great improvement in a patients condition, but it can
also mean disability and death in the weakest patients."
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