Gulf Today

Obrador announces $5.7b plan to revamp health care

The plan aims to improve hospitalis­ation services and ensure supplies of medication­s for poor Mexicans not covered by one of the two main federal health insurance programmes

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MEXICO CITY: Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador announced a $5.7-billion, twoyear plan on Friday to revamp the country’s health care system for the poor. He also said the country should consider a program for euthanasia, or voluntary assisted dying, which is currently not allowed.

“Why don’t we implement some programme for dignified death? Why not, assisted?” said Lopez Obrador. “These are very important questions we have to resolve among all of us.”

The plan aims to improve hospitalis­ation services and ensure supplies of medication­s for poor Mexicans not covered by one of the two main federal health insurance programs.

Mexico already has one system for private-sector workers whose employers contribute health insurance payments, and another system for government employees.

Farmers, the self-employed and street vendors fall outside those plans.

“More than half the population has no health insurance,” Lopez Obrador said. “So this program is for them. It is for everybody, but the emphasis is to care for those with no insurance, the poorest people.”

At present they are treated at a patchwork of state and local clinics, which often don’t have the level of care or medication­s they need.

But under the new plan they would be eligible for emergency treatment at hospitals in the two other, betterfund­ed systems. Lopez Obrador pledged to improve funding and stafing at the federal facilities.

Lopez Obrador also said the federal government would take responsibi­lity for treating everyone in eight states in the impoverish­ed southeast, the irst to join the plan. Mexico’s other 24 states would be added eight at a time, so all would be covered within two years.

Lopez Obrador put special emphasis on providing medication­s; while Mexicans can often get diagnosis, the medicines they need often simply aren’t available at hospitals and clinics.

Patients are often forced to buy medication­s at private pharmacies with their own funds, and there have been many instances of fraud and corruption in the bidding to supply medication­s the government does buy.

Lopez Obrador said he would invite the United Nations to oversee purchasing programs to ensure transparen­cy.

 ??  ?? Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador

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