aederal aireplace ( Rarbecue 8z patio Changing Realities The peace process is not the only factor altering Israel's economic, social and political landscapes. INA FRIEDMAN ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT Complete sets with on/off valve, burner, grate, sand, & embers. health-care system has been to improve the quality of services by increasing the competition between the various health pro- grams ("sick funds"), after plac- ing them on an equal footing. The General Sick Fund, for example, which is run by the Histadrut (National Federation of Labor), has always been the largest of these programs es- sentially because it is the most accessible (with infirmaries in even the most remote of settle- Photo by AP/Nati Harnik XIsTIJ W ith all the attention given to the agonizing progress of the peace process, it's easy to lose sight of the fact that a col- lection of far more prosaic issues have been dominating the news in Israel for much of the past few weeks. Many are matters that have a far greater impact on the dai- ly lives of Israel's citizens than, for example, security arrange- ments at the border crossings. Tel Aviv residents lineup at a lottery booth. W 1994 THE DETROIT JEWIS H NEWS 0-9 -9889 110 Next time you feed your face, think about your heart. Go easy on your heart and start cutting back on foods that are high in saturated fat and cholesterol. The change'II do you good. At . ft V American Heart Association WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE And, taken together, they raise serious questions about how well Yitzhak Rabin's govern- ment is living up to its promise to change the order of national priorities, give Israel's citizens a better break, and ensure their children a better future. The biggest of these headline- making matters is the state of national health care and the fate of the new national health bill, which has already led to the resignation of Health Minister Chaim Ramon. Because of the country's par- ticular system of "socialized medicine," Israelis actually have better (or at least more univer- sal) health coverage than is available in many other "West- ern" countries. But, as in oth- er countries, the health-care system has been shouldering an increasing burden. One result of the over-crowd- ed hospitals, long waits for sur- gical procedures, and intermittent, often long, and al- ways punishing strikes by health-care personnel has been the growth of private health ser- vices, which only serves a priv- ileged portion of the population. The aim of reforming the ments). It has also been suffer- ing from chronic debt. Thus the reform bill was de- signed to ease its financial dis- tress by having the government collect all health-fund payments and divide the kitty more equi- tably. Without such reform, the Health Ministry argued, the General Fund would simply col- lapse, taking the entire health- care system down with it. That has been a compelling argument. But the prerequisite to the Ramon plan is to make the General Fund an indepen- dent entity, like all the other programs — and the Histadrut has balked at this idea. It insists not only on requir- ing General Fund patients to remain members of the labor organization but on collecting 50 percent of the health fees on its own. And that, in turn, has led wary citizens to suspect that part of the health-care fees will inevitably be channeled toward other Histadrut interests, in- cluding the sustenance of its mammoth (and, many critics charge, self-serving) bureau- cracy. The Labor members of the government, including the