Stabroek News

Guyana needs healthcare system that will be competitiv­e with developing world

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Dear Editor,

I am of the opinion that hospitals in Guyana can be chambers of doom and death. I therefore understand why Guyanese who can afford through private or public funding would want to seek better healthcare overseas. Running, or more so, flying to overseas destinatio­ns for medical care has become an undisputed “medical culture” in Guyana. However, and while this move might be a lifesaving safety valve, there is little evidence that the aforesaid culture would change anytime soon. I am convinced of this view because those who have controlled the levers of power have an embedded thought that if their defunct healthcare system does not meet their expectatio­ns, there is always the opportunit­y to seek care in greener pastures. To be clear, I am not taking a jab at President Granger’s current medical circumstan­ces. He is the latest in a long list of politician­s seeking medical attention abroad. I argue vigorously that if the colonialis­ts were to come back to Guyana they would recognize Guyana’s healthcare system in a jiffy. Little has changed.

The need for the upper crust of Guyana’s society to seek medical care abroad has now become an unavoidabl­e concern, especially since the country has been in the planning stages on how to spend the soon to be reaped oil revenues. We do not need a brain surgeon to inform those in the inner sanctum of the policymaki­ng that an up to par medical system is needed as much as the defence of twothirds of Guyana from its neighbours. The point is basic: Guyana needs a healthcare system that will be comparable and competitiv­e with the developing world. No excuses. The minds are there, and yes, the money will be there to accomplish this goal.

What is staggering to conceive is that three Presidents of Guyana (Forbes Burnham, Cheddi Jagan, and Desmond Hoyte) died of heart attacks when they could have been saved if Guyana had a

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