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The Western Journal of Medicine logoLink to The Western Journal of Medicine
. 1983 Nov;139(5):737–741.

Doctoring in Eastern Europe

Henry Wilde
PMCID: PMC1010995  PMID: 6659504

Abstract

Health care in Eastern Europe has not achieved world standards nor the goals of planners of socialist societies. With luck, perseverance, bribes or good connections, it is possible to obtain good medical and surgical care in Eastern Europe for a major illness. Primary and even secondary care usually are substandard, however, and often completely unacceptable to most Western foreigners. The reasons for this are complex but mainly rooted in different attitudes of health workers towards their patients, poor physical plants, poor salary structures, inadequate advancement opportunities for health care workers, poor social status and professional recognition for nurses and almost complete isolation of the average primary care doctor from hospital medicine.

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