Gezondheidssector
wereldwijd corrupt.*
Volgens
een internationaal rapport van Transparency International is de
gezondheidszorg wereldwijd een zeer corrupte sector. Diefstal, fraude,
corruptie en afpersing zijn schering en inslag.
Ieder
jaar verdwijnt op deze wijze een bedrag van ruim 250 miljoen Euro, of meer. De
corruptie komt voor in alle landen: rijk of arm. Corruptie kan vele vormen
aannemen: omkoping door de farmaceutische industrie, artsen die extra geld
vragen voor behandeling en de verkoop van nepmedicijnen. Het rapport wijst er
ook op dat de corruptie niet alleen geld kost doch ten koste van de patiënt
kan gaan. Bijvoorbeeld wanneer iemand tijdens een operatie sterft doordat een
injectie water in plaats van medicijnen bevat.
Theft,
bribery and extortion rob millions of proper healthcare, says Global
Corruption Report 2006
Counterfeit
drugs kill thousands each year and accelerate spread of drug-resistant
diseases
Berlin/London,
01 February 2006
Corruption
in the health sector deprives those most in need of essential medical care and
helps spawn drug-resistant strains of deadly diseases, says Transparency
International’s Global Corruption Report 2006, published today.
For
the millions of poor held hostage by unethical providers, stamping out
corruption in health care is a matter of life and death. “Corruption in
health care costs more than money. When an infant dies during an operation
because an adrenalin injection to restart her heart was actually just water
– how do you put a price on that?” said Huguette Labelle, Chair of
Transparency International. “The price of corruption in health care is paid
in human suffering.”
Haemorrhaging
health systems
The
report shines a powerful light on the global US $3 trillion health sector,
exposing a maze of complex and opaque systems that are a fertile field for
corruption. While the majority of people employed in the sector perform their
functions with diligence and integrity, there is evidence of bribery and fraud
across the breadth of health services, from petty thievery and extortion to
massive distortions of health policy and funding fed by payoffs to officials.
Corruption
permeates the provision of health care, whether public or private, simple or
sophisticated.
Public
health budgets become subverted by unethical officials for private use.
Hospitals
function as self-service stores for illicit enrichment, with unclear
procurement
of equipment and supplies and ghost employees on the payroll.
Health
workers demand fees for services that should be free. In Bulgaria, as in much
of South East Europe, doctors frequently accept small informal payments or
gifts for medical treatment. This can be anything from between US $10 – US
$50 and in some cases can rise to US $1,100.
In
the Philippines, a 10 per cent increase in the extortion of bribes by medical
personnel was shown to reduce the rate of child immunisation by up to 20 per
cent.
In
Cambodia, certain health indicators have worsened partly because of direct
embezzlement of public health funds and despite increased health aid. In
contrast, in the United Kingdom tighter control mechanisms have reduced losses
to corruption by US $300 million since 1999.
In
Costa Rica, nearly 20 percent of a US $40 million international loan for
health equipment wandered into private pockets.
“Corruption
eats away at the public’s trust in the medical community. People have a
right to expect that the drugs they depend on are real. They have a right to
think that doctors place a patient’s interests above profits. And most of
all, they have a right to believe that the health care industry is there to
cure, not to kill,” said David Nussbaum, Chief Executive of Transparency
International.
Market
distortions and counterfeit drugs
Aggressive
marketing techniques buy physicians’ support for specific drugs, leading to
a high rate of prescriptions that are not always based on patient need. With
individual “blockbuster” drugs pulling in tens of billions of dollars each
year for pharmaceutical companies, ballooning marketing and lobbying budgets
have outpaced the research and development outlays necessary to create new and
critical medicines that could save lives in low-income countries.
Corruption
underpins a lucrative counterfeit drugs trade. Payoffs at every step of the
chain smooth the flow of counterfeit drugs from their source to the unwitting
consumer. With pharmaceuticals often the largest household health expenditure
in developing countries – estimated at 50-90 per cent of total individual
out-of-pocket health expenses – corruption in the pharmaceutical industry
has a direct and painful impact on people struggling for survival.
Undermining
the fight against HIV/AIDS
Corruption
has hampered the success of global efforts to reign in the HIV/AIDS pandemic.
The international response to the growing crisis has been to scale up aid in
order to fund prevention programmes and the disbursement of life-saving
anti-retroviral medications. Increased aid alone will not be effective if
corruption is not curbed. Accountability mechanisms need to be introduced to
prevent money from leaking at every level.
Theft
by ministries and national AIDS councils of funds allocated for treatment
leave sufferers without critical care. Kenya’s National Aids Council was
hijacked by a few high-level civil servants, diverting critical resources
through shell organisations expressly formed to siphon off public funds.
Corruption
can contribute directly to infection when relatively low-cost measures, such
as sterile needles and screening of blood donations, cannot be carried out
because a corrupt procurement or distribution process holds up supplies.
Millennium
Development Goals under threat
Corruption
is undermining progress towards the United Nations’ Millennium Development
Goals, in particular the three related directly to health: reduced child
mortality; improved maternal health; and the fight against HIV/AIDS, malaria
and other diseases. With the target date for achieving the goals just nine
years away, the global community is already off target to meet them – and
corruption is one of the primary causes.
“Poor
families, particularly in rural areas, who cannot afford private health care
face the agonising choice of food or medicine. Feed your child or cure his
illness, but not both? No parent should face that awful choice,” said
Huguette Labelle.
Transparency
International recommendations
The
cure for corruption in the health care industry starts with transparency.
Donor
and recipient governments should grant easy access to information on key
aspects of health-related projects, budgets and policies. Budget information
should be available on the internet and subject to independent audits.
Adopt
and enforce codes of conduct for health workers and private sector companies
and provide ongoing anti-corruption training.
Incorporate
conflict-of-interest rules in drug regulation and physician licensing
procedures.
Public
health policies and projects should be independently monitored, both at the
national and international level, and their reports should be open to public
scrutiny.
Procurement
processes should be competitive, open and transparent, and comply with
Transparency International’s Minimum Standards for Transparency and Public
Contracting. Rules on conflicts of interest must be enforced and companies
that engage in corruption debarred from future bidding. No-bribe pledges such
as TI’s Integrity Pact should be adopted to level the playing field for all
bidders.
Rigorous
prosecution will send the message that corruption in health care will not be
tolerated. To facilitate this, there must be robust whistleblower protection
for both government employees and private sector health, pharmaceutical and
biotech employees.
State
of corruption worldwide
The
Global Corruption Report 2006 also presents reports on the state of
corruption and governance in 45 countries around the world, including
troubling evidence of financial irregularities in post-tsunami relief
operations. The report’s final section surveys the cutting edge in
corruption research.
#
# #
Transparency International is the global civil society organisation
leading the fight against corruption.
To download the Global Corruption Report 2006, please click here (Februari 2006)