
By MICHAEL MILLENSON
At the recent Academy Awards broadcast, a brief film clip from the Oscar-nominated Iranian film “It Was Just An Accident” showed a man pushing an unconscious, very pregnant woman on a gurney into a hospital emergency room. Without intending to do so, the excerpt pointed to one of the many common concerns shared by Iranians and Americans when dealing with their respective health care systems.
In the Iranian movie, a hospital desk clerk turns away the woman for lack of a payment up front with cash or a credit card. Although that kind of rejection is supposed to be illegal in America, indigent patients can be turned away if the hospital simply tells them their problem isn’t urgent. Even if accepted as self-pay, they might find themselves being billed up to 13 times what the hospital accepts from the government.
Yet it’s not just high costs and unfeeling bureaucrats that worry both Americans and Iranians – although Oscars host Conan O’Brien did joke that in the movie “Hamnet,” Shakespeare’s wife giving birth alone in the woods was “what we call in America ‘affordable health care.’” Iran is an urbanized nation of 93 million people. While the radical hostility to Western values of its clerical rulers is an important contributor to the current war with America, the society as a whole struggles with many of the same health-system problems as other developed countries, including the United States, and often approaches them in a similar way. Still, there are some exceptions unique to the Iranian context.
Consider Iranian researchers articles about diabetics’ experiences at the doctor’s office; ensuring a future supply of nurses; and health insurance utilization and expenditures for a particularly vulnerable population. Though all are topics which might equally appear in a U.S. journal, what sets them apart here is the authorship. At least one co-author of each is affiliated with an institution whose origins would seem as far away from health services research as imaginable. That’s Teheran’s Baqiyattalah University of Medical Sciences, (pictured below) which was founded by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Affiliation aside, Iranian researchers are typically trained much like their U.S. counterparts, and that’s reflected in both their work and the international journals where it’s published.
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