Funding Provided for Medical and Sanitary Assistance and Treatment of Repatriates in the Ukrainian SSR (1944-1950)

This article thoroughly presents the issue of financial support for sanitary treatment, medical examination, and treatment of repatriates who returned to the Ukrainian SSR in 1944-1950. It is argued that an analysis of certain activities of the Soviet repatriation department is somewhat indicative a...

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Main Authors: Liubov Dyptan, Olexandr Potyl’chak
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Stefan cel Mare University of Suceava 2021-07-01
Series:Codrul Cosminului
Subjects:
Online Access:http://codrulcosminului.usv.ro/CC27/1/pdf/repatriates.pdf
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spelling doaj-84188bcdda3f426fb5c49fafc72a922f2021-08-25T19:46:27ZdeuStefan cel Mare University of SuceavaCodrul Cosminului1224-032X2067-58602021-07-0127119321610.4316/CC.2021.01.010Funding Provided for Medical and Sanitary Assistance and Treatment of Repatriates in the Ukrainian SSR (1944-1950)Liubov Dyptan0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8029-7961Olexandr Potyl’chak1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3518-9280National Pedagogical Dragomanov University, Kyiv (Ukraine)National Pedagogical Dragomanov University, Kyiv (Ukraine)This article thoroughly presents the issue of financial support for sanitary treatment, medical examination, and treatment of repatriates who returned to the Ukrainian SSR in 1944-1950. It is argued that an analysis of certain activities of the Soviet repatriation department is somewhat indicative as it allows us to assess the motivations and priorities of the totalitarian state’s Government in matters related to the return of the USSR’s citizens back home with the status of “displaced persons”. The authorities acted pragmatically in financing the costs of sanitary and medical needs of returned citizens. In the dynamics of this process, the authors distinguish three separate chronological stages. Namely, (1) the commencement of repatriation process, (2) mass repatriation period, and (3) subsequent repatriation process. At the first stage (autumn, 1944 – spring, 1945), there was no centralised provision of financial costs for carrying out sanitary treatment, medical examination, and treatment of sick repatriates. During the mass repatriation (summer 1945 – spring 1946), the Government provided increased centralised financing of the health needs of repatriated citizens. After the return of the bulk of repatriates to the Ukrainian SSR, the authorities sharply reduced funding for medical and sanitary support for the subsequent repatriation process. From the spring of 1946 until the end of 1949, the Government only funded mandatory anti-epidemic measures. The structure of the budget expenditures on the health care of repatriates demonstrates that the authorities’ apparent priority in this matter was to prevent the spread of epidemic diseases. Instead, the provision of medicine and inpatient treatment of the so-called “internal” diseases were not among their priorities.http://codrulcosminului.usv.ro/CC27/1/pdf/repatriates.pdfworld war iibudgethealth carerepatriationcommunismukrainian ssrmedical assistance
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liubov Dyptan
Olexandr Potyl’chak
spellingShingle Liubov Dyptan
Olexandr Potyl’chak
Funding Provided for Medical and Sanitary Assistance and Treatment of Repatriates in the Ukrainian SSR (1944-1950)
Codrul Cosminului
world war ii
budget
health care
repatriation
communism
ukrainian ssr
medical assistance
author_facet Liubov Dyptan
Olexandr Potyl’chak
author_sort Liubov Dyptan
title Funding Provided for Medical and Sanitary Assistance and Treatment of Repatriates in the Ukrainian SSR (1944-1950)
title_short Funding Provided for Medical and Sanitary Assistance and Treatment of Repatriates in the Ukrainian SSR (1944-1950)
title_full Funding Provided for Medical and Sanitary Assistance and Treatment of Repatriates in the Ukrainian SSR (1944-1950)
title_fullStr Funding Provided for Medical and Sanitary Assistance and Treatment of Repatriates in the Ukrainian SSR (1944-1950)
title_full_unstemmed Funding Provided for Medical and Sanitary Assistance and Treatment of Repatriates in the Ukrainian SSR (1944-1950)
title_sort funding provided for medical and sanitary assistance and treatment of repatriates in the ukrainian ssr (1944-1950)
publisher Stefan cel Mare University of Suceava
series Codrul Cosminului
issn 1224-032X
2067-5860
publishDate 2021-07-01
description This article thoroughly presents the issue of financial support for sanitary treatment, medical examination, and treatment of repatriates who returned to the Ukrainian SSR in 1944-1950. It is argued that an analysis of certain activities of the Soviet repatriation department is somewhat indicative as it allows us to assess the motivations and priorities of the totalitarian state’s Government in matters related to the return of the USSR’s citizens back home with the status of “displaced persons”. The authorities acted pragmatically in financing the costs of sanitary and medical needs of returned citizens. In the dynamics of this process, the authors distinguish three separate chronological stages. Namely, (1) the commencement of repatriation process, (2) mass repatriation period, and (3) subsequent repatriation process. At the first stage (autumn, 1944 – spring, 1945), there was no centralised provision of financial costs for carrying out sanitary treatment, medical examination, and treatment of sick repatriates. During the mass repatriation (summer 1945 – spring 1946), the Government provided increased centralised financing of the health needs of repatriated citizens. After the return of the bulk of repatriates to the Ukrainian SSR, the authorities sharply reduced funding for medical and sanitary support for the subsequent repatriation process. From the spring of 1946 until the end of 1949, the Government only funded mandatory anti-epidemic measures. The structure of the budget expenditures on the health care of repatriates demonstrates that the authorities’ apparent priority in this matter was to prevent the spread of epidemic diseases. Instead, the provision of medicine and inpatient treatment of the so-called “internal” diseases were not among their priorities.
topic world war ii
budget
health care
repatriation
communism
ukrainian ssr
medical assistance
url http://codrulcosminului.usv.ro/CC27/1/pdf/repatriates.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT liubovdyptan fundingprovidedformedicalandsanitaryassistanceandtreatmentofrepatriatesintheukrainianssr19441950
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