Nothing in life is free. You've heard the saying before. Some may believe these to be the words of a pessimist. Others, perhaps, see them as a testament to the realities of life.
Not very long ago, our Prime Minister announced that health care would be free at all public hospitals. With this declaration came mixed reactions from the public. There were those who applauded this decision. After all, how many persons can really afford the type of treatment they may need? This seemed like the solution to the problem.
Then there were the naysayers. And among them was yours truly. In my mind's eye, the road ahead looked bleak. Free health care to me equalled over-crowded hospitals; over-worked, under-paid staff; poor work ethic; sub-standard conditions. Pessimistic? Maybe. Far from the truth? Not exactly.
I went to a public hospital recently to visit an inpatient and saw the evidence. If there was a doctor on duty at all, there was probably only one. While it is a large facility, I still did not understand why I could not speak with one physician the hour or more I was there.
As it relates to sanitary conditions, I can't speak to the other wards, but this particular one seemed to be in need of a thorough clean. Furthermore - to my disgust - the area where the individual was had a trail of fecal matter on the floor. Had one of the persons who accompanied me not seen it, I would have stepped right in the mess.
While there, I kept glancing over my shoulder to see if someone would come and clean it up. But people kept passing by, warned by patients and visitors alike to watch their step. A nurse even trekked passed, obviously preoccupied with attending to patients' needs. Needless to say, the trail remained even as we left the ward. And as we exited, not far away in the corridor, there were housekeeping personnel, caught up in a conversation seemingly more important than ensuring that the wards remained sanitary.
Initially, I was angry. Why weren't they doing their jobs? Is this what they were being paid to do? Sit and chat? Then my previous thoughts surfaced. What about their working conditions? What resources are being made available to them? What is the housekeeper-to-ward ratio like? Could they have been working double for the same wage?
The sequence popped back into my head. Free health care = over-crowded hospitals; over-worked, under-paid staff; poor work ethic; sub-standard conditions. It all comes back to the fact that nothing in life is free. It may not cost you in terms of monetary value but it will cost, draining you of equally valuable resources: time, energy, quality of work, reliability, self-respect, discipline - all of which has a ripple effect more far-reaching than we may realize.