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The way forward in the Polish doctors and nurses strike
By Marius Heuser
19 July 2007
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The weeks-long strikes and protests by Polish doctors and nurses
are threatening to end in defeat. Although protesting nurses have
recently undertaken increasingly desperate measures, including
a hunger strike, the right-wing Law and Justice Party government
led by Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski has refused to make any
concessions. The response by the nurses own trade union
has been to break off all demonstrations and dismantle the protest
camp set up in front of the government offices in Warsaw.
For four weeks hundreds of nurses and care personnel manned
the protest camp demanding pay rises. Doctors, who have taken
strike action over the last nine weeks, have announced they will
continue their action but have now been left increasingly isolated
by the abandonment of the struggle by the nurses union.
Hospital personnel have been demanding improvements to the
run-down Polish health system and a substantial wage increase.
A Polish nurse with 30 years service earns less than 300 euros
a month, while young doctors earn slightly more and most take
home around 340 euros. These are wage levels, which make any sort
a decent standard of living for an individual in Polandnot
to speak a familyimpossible. As a result thousands of qualified
doctors and nurses have emigrated to England, Sweden or other
European Union states, where they can earn substantially more.
Following protests in the health service last year the Kaczynski
government agreed a general 30 percent wage increase for health
workers. The money, however, was awarded to hospital management,
which often used it for the renovation of run-down facilities
or the repayment of debts rather than supplementing wages.
The crisis within the healthcare system is symptomatic of the
economic situation in the entire country nearly 20 years since
the restoration of capitalism. While a narrow elite has access
to the very best medical care and private hospitals, the overwhelming
majority of the population is dependent on one of the worst health
systems in Europe. At barely 4 percent of GNP, Poland spends less
money on healthcare than any other nation in the European Union.
It is usual practice for patients to wait months for treatmenteven
in the case of life-threatening diseasesbecause of the lack
of hospital beds. This situation has led to a system whereby patients
are forced to pay large bribes in order to move up waiting lists.
The physical survival of many patients is directly bound up with
the size of their wallets.
This state of affairs is the product of the ruthless implementation
of the free market in Poland over the last two decades. Up until
the collapse of the Stalinist system in 1989, the Polish constitution
of 1952 guaranteed every worker the right to comprehensive and
free medical treatmenteven though in practice it became
increasingly difficult for workers lacking connections to the
bureaucracy to realise their entitlements.
The restoration of capitalism, which transferred nationalised
state property into the possession of the new elite, resulted
in a series of devastating cuts in health service. At the same
time additional funding reductions were made to trim the countrys
budget for entry into the European Union. Brussels not only demanded
the break-up of the countrys agricultural and mining industry,
but cuts in the national budget. The ratio of hospital beds per
1,000 inhabitants subsequently decreased from 6.7 in 1980 to 4.6
in 2002. In one year alone1991nearly 100 hospitals
and health centres, i.e., 2,500 hospital beds, were slashed.
In 1999 the conservative government of Election Action Solidarity
(AWS) replaced the former, dilapidated state guaranteed healthcare
system with a regionally organized obligatory insurance, requiring
every citizen to contribute 7.5 percent of his income, irrespective
of income level. This meant hospitals were no longer financed
directly by the state, but through health insurance companies.
The result was a drastic supply crisis and a further decline in
wages and numbers of personnel.
In 2001 the post-Stalinist Democratic Left Alliance (SLD) government
replaced the regional funds by a National Health Fund (NFZ), which
basically operated on the same system and only served to deepen
the crisis. Hospitals were treated as if they were private companies,
which had to negotiate a certain percentage of private treatment
in order to subsidise treatment for the rest of the population.
The way in which the meagre funds were distributed was then left
to the discretion of the hospital management. This represented
a major step towards the privatisation of the health system. At
the same time, the number of private hospitals shot up. Speaking
on behalf of a private health company, Medicover, Bartosz Maciejewski
boasted that his company already had 280,000 customers and the
number was increasing.
The latest protests by doctors and nurses are not only directed
at improving their miserable wages, but also reflect their alarm
at the state of the health system. Individuals motivated by the
desire to care and heal have been forced to look on as increasing
obstacles are put in the way of their work.
This also explains the high level of solidarity within the
population for the medical personnel. According to one poll, 75
percent of the population support the demands of the doctors and
nurses. Nurses at the protest camp reported complete strangers
coming to bring them food and beverages. When the police moved
in to forcibly break up a protest by nurses, thousands of miners
and railway workers spontaneously travelled to Warsaw to protect
the nurses against police brutality.
Reaction of the government
The government led by Kaczynski is very conscious of the significance
of the protests as an expression of the fundamental contradiction
between the demands of workers and the reality of modern capitalism
in Poland. After seeking to appease workers one year ago with
a 30 percent wage increase, the government is now going on the
offensive. It has stated that the doctors demands would
cost 2.7 billion euros and exceed the budget limit laid down by
the EU. Prime Minister Kaczynski explained that any concession
by the government would massively undermine the confidence
of other European Union states in the country.
The prime minister even went so far as to claim that the strikers
were being manipulated by foreign forces. In hysterical
religious tones, Kaczynski warned against the devils
work and his party colleague Tadeusz Cymanski went further
in a later interview, saying the government was in a struggle
against evil, the powers of darkness.
The rhetoric of the Kaczynski brothers cannot hide their utter
cynicism. When it suits their own interests they are prepared
to play the nationalist, anti-EU card, but when it comes to the
doctors wages they solidarise with the EU and its budget
limitations.
In line with its struggle against evil the government
sent in police to brutally break up a completely peaceful demonstration
by nurses. You treated us like criminals ... like hooligans
in a stadium was the reaction of the president of the Polish
Nurses Union, Izabella Szczepaniak. Several injured women had
to be treated in hospital while Kaczynski and his health minister
Religa have made clear that they regard the protests by nurses
and doctors to be illegal and the deployment of police entirely
justified.
During the last two years the government has been preparing
for precisely such a confrontation with workers. The Kaczynski
brothers (twin brother Lech is president) have filled strategic
posts in the entire state apparatus with their own supporters.
They have brought the national media under their direct control
and created an institutionthe Central Anti-corruption Office
(CBA)which is directly subordinate to the prime minister
and unites the police with Polish intelligence agencies. Recently
the CBA accused the right-wing populist and head of the Kaczynskis
coalition partner Samoobrona (Self-Defense), Andrzej Lepper, of
corruption and thereby sought to put pressure on his organisation.
Lepper had sought to correct the plunging levels of support for
his party by expressing some sympathy for the striking hospital
personnel.
Flanked by a deliberate campaign of misinformation in the press
against the strikers, the government is planning further attacks
on the health system by forcing through privatisation. Jaroslaw
Kaczynski has already announced plans for a national referendum
on the question of the privatisation of the hospitals and stated
that the question must be discussed, otherwise public finances
would be bankrupted by the workers wage demands. That
would be absolutely irresponsible, he concluded.
Upon taking over his post two years ago the Polish Health Minister
Zbigniew Religa, (an independent with close links to the neo-liberal
opposition party Citizens PlatformPO) declared his
main priority was the setting up of a private health insurance
system. While promising increased funding for hospitals, the reality
of his two years in office has been merely to legalize the practice
of bribery for medical treatment. Those with enough money to insure
themselves privately receive premium medical care, while the rest
of the population must wait patiently on a list for the chance
of a place in an overcrowded ward under miserable conditions.
The latest plans by the Kaczynskis for the complete privatisation
of the hospitals mean an inevitable further deterioration of healthcare
for the majority of the population, of whom 12.8 percent subsist
on an income of 100 euros per month or less.
The perspective of the trade unions
The trade unions have neither the means nor the intention of
opposing the frontal attack made by the government. From the very
beginning they sought to demobilise health workers by presenting
their struggle as purely of an economic nature. The vice-chairman
of the National Doctors Trade Union (OZZL), Tomasz Underman,
stressed on several occasions that its protests should under no
circumstances be considered a political strike. The OZZL has even
declared that it is in principle not opposed to the privatisation
of hospitals.
The doctors union reacted in a conciliatory fashion to
the governments refusal to contemplate wage increases and
its declaration that the strikes were illegal. At the same time
the public were told that President Lech Kaczynski was simply
not informed about the situation in the hospitals and would probably
support the demands of the health workers in future. Now the nurses
union has suspended its protests without any palpable results.
To the extent that trade union leaders play down the attacks
being carried out by the government and suppress the political
questions involved in the strikein particular the restructuring
of the health servicethey are consciously creating the conditions
for the defeat of the strike. Even if they achieve a wage increase
of few percentage pointsan event which would be presented
by the trade union as a successthis would merely
represent hush money aimed at paving the road to complete privatisation
with catastrophic consequences both for the majority of health
workers and the population at large.
The conciliatory stance of the trade unions has already led
some health sector workers to attempt to break out of the bureaucratic
straitjacket. In a protest carried out without the sanction of
the OZZL, 200 doctors at a large Warsaw hospital occupied a street
adjoining their place of work. The leader of the hospitals
strike committee, Maciej Jedrzejowski, explained later that the
action had been an expression of despair and frustration on the
part of doctors.
While such militant actions outside of the organizational control
of the trade unions are to be welcomed, they are insufficient
to combat the combined forces of the Polish government, state
and media, which requires a political struggle by the working
class. At the same time, the Kaczynski government is very weak,
having been voted into power by a small majority of the electorate
and only retains power through the continuous shifting of seats
and positions within its shaky coalition of right-wing parties.
Opinion polls demonstrate that the former limited support for
the government is sinking even further.
This government is only held in power by the complete lack
of any effective opposition. Millions of workers have only contempt
for the Kaczynskis, but still recall with dread the policies and
rule of the party which held the reins of power longest following
capitalist restorationthe post-Stalinist SLD.
Any effective movement against the government must draw a balance
of capitalist restorationincluding the role played by the
Solidarity movement in preparing for such a restorationand
its political helpers over the past two decades, in particular
the SLD and the Polish trade union bureaucracy. Polish health
workers must develop their own broad political movement, turning
to other sections of workers including miners, teachers and railway
workers. At the same time, they should strive to establish links
with their European and international colleagues on the basis
of a struggle to repulse all attempts at privatisation in order
to defend what remains of the Polish health and welfare system
on the basis of a genuine socialist program.
See Also:
Poland: Health workers in confrontation
with Kaczynski government
[10 July 2007]
Polish healthcare workers discuss their
strike
[10 July 2007]
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