By MICHAEL MILLENSON
On the latest Academy Awards broadcast, a quick movie clip from the Oscar-nominated Iranian movie “It Was Simply An Accident” confirmed a person pushing an unconscious, very pregnant lady on a gurney right into a hospital emergency room. With out intending to take action, the excerpt pointed to one of many many widespread issues shared by Iranians and People when coping with their respective well being care techniques.
In the Iranian movie, a hospital desk clerk turns away the lady for lack of a fee up entrance with money or a bank card. Though that type of rejection is supposed to be illegal in America, indigent sufferers can be turned away if the hospital merely tells them their downside isn’t pressing. Even when accepted as self-pay, they could discover themselves being billed up to 13 times what the hospital accepts from the federal government.
But it’s not simply excessive prices and unfeeling bureaucrats that fear each People and Iranians – though Oscars host Conan O’Brien did joke that within the film “Hamnet,” Shakespeare’s spouse giving delivery alone within the woods was “what we name in America ‘reasonably priced well being care.’” Iran is an urbanized nation of 93 million folks. Whereas the unconventional hostility to Western values of its clerical rulers is a vital contributor to the present warfare with America, the society as an entire struggles with lots of the identical health-system issues as different developed international locations, together with the US, and sometimes approaches them in an analogous manner. Nonetheless, there are some exceptions distinctive to the Iranian context.
Think about Iranian researchers articles about diabetics’ experiences on the physician’s workplace; guaranteeing a future provide of nurses; and medical health insurance utilization and expenditures for a very weak inhabitants. Although all are subjects which could equally seem in a U.S. journal, what units them aside right here is the authorship. Not less than one co-author of every is affiliated with an establishment whose origins would appear as far-off from well being companies analysis as possible. That’s Teheran’s Baqiyattalah University of Medical Sciences, (pictured beneath) which was based by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Affiliation apart, Iranian researchers are sometimes skilled very similar to their U.S. counterparts, and that’s mirrored in each their work and the worldwide journals the place it’s printed.
As an illustration, the examine of diabetics used a standardized questionnaire from the World Well being Group. And the nursing examine drew upon a diverse research team that included researchers from a nursing school, a “Life-style Institute,” a College of Nursing and Midwifery, a most cancers analysis heart and a well being administration analysis heart.
Nonetheless, there are additionally areas of sharp distinction. The “weak inhabitants” whose well being care utilization and expenditures Iranian researchers focused upon was a cohort of 59,000 people who’d survived sulfur mustard fuel publicity through the Iran-Iraq warfare. (In an unlucky misspelling within the English model of the article, the statistical strategy of “poisson regression” was written as “poison.”)
One other examine probed the “impacts of financial sanctions on inhabitants well being and well being techniques” in Iran from 2000 to 2020. The imposition of these sanctions, in fact, was led by the US as a part of a “chilly warfare” over potential Iranian nuclear capabilities that has now erupted right into a “sizzling warfare.” The sanctions’ affect on the Iranian inhabitants included elevated well being care prices, worse outcomes for these with power illness and widespread dissatisfaction by sufferers and suppliers alike with the issue of accessing important medicines.
The researchers added that these kinds of antagonistic results had additionally been documented in Iraq, Cuba, Libya, Venezuela and Russia. Curiously, the Iranian examine was cited in a commentary on the use of medical sanctions printed in April, 2025 within the American Journal of Bioethics.
Talking of ethics, a 2020 examine of “Barriers to healthcare delivery in Iranian prisons” in some way prevented mentioning a detailed 2016 report by Amnesty Worldwide alleging “merciless denial of medical care” to some prisoners. Violations of human rights included denying desperately wanted surgical procedure and drugs to political prisoners with a purpose to coerce confessions.
Nonetheless, Iranian researchers additionally produce the kind of essential research thought of routine in democracies. These included investigating elements related to “failure” of health system reform; out-of-pocket health care costs being greater in Iran than different high-spending international locations, together with the US; and a systematic review of the “challenges and weaknesses of management and governance-related well being insurance policies in Iran.”
In the meantime, components of a commentary on Iranian well being reform might nearly be cut-and-pasted into any U.S. coverage journal. After itemizing achievements similar to higher fairness in entry to care and enhancements in maternal and baby mortality, the commentary factors to remaining challenges associated to the excessive price of care, rationalizing service utilization and offering high-quality care to all, partly by addressing social determinants of well being.
The one factor that might must be deleted is the notation that each one of those efforts are supposed to assist the nation attain its proclaimed aim of “common well being protection.” U.S. political leaders, in distinction, have but to contemplate common well being protection as pressing an ethical and financial aim because the mullahs who rule Iran.
Michael L. Millenson is president of Well being High quality Advisors LLC, a affected person security knowledgeable and activist, and the creator of the basic Demanding Medical Excellence (1997)
