Bulgarian Prime Minister Takes Action on 'Mama I Az' Hospital
Acting Prime Minister Dimitar Glavchev is poised to address critical issues plaguing children's healthcare in Bulgaria, particularly regarding the "Mama I Az" hospital.
To think that emergency care ends with ambulances is absurd; it continues inside hospitals, says Bulgaria's Health Minister, Stefan Konstantinov.
Konstantinov, who spoke Sunday for the Bulgarian National Radio, BNR, stressed that emergency care has been debated a lot during the year and explained emergency doctors suffer from financial and organizational problems. The Health Ministry has proposed for discussion to all interested parties a package of measures to solve these problems.
"There are different opinions, and reforms depend on the balance between all parties, but at the end the priority is how the patient feels more secure and better protected," the Minister pointed out.
According to Konstantinov, budget 2012 is a "budget of the possible." He stated that he would be happier with a larger budget, but on the backdrop of the Eurozone crisis, keeping the level of 2011 funding could be seen as a small success.
"This budget has more funding for hospitals, because money for oncology, hemodialysis, and cancer medications are being transferred to them. It does not deprive both specialist and general practitioners; it would reduce long lines for getting prescriptions," the Minister said.
Konstantinov further pointed at the "shrinking" of administration in the health care sector with cancelations of 2 000 job positions in the last two years, realized mainly through mergers of regional health inspectorates and regional health centers.
The Minister vowed that hospitals' income and conditions would not go down and worsen.
We need your support so Novinite.com can keep delivering news and information about Bulgaria! Thank you!
Stylists recommend that you pay attention to the acidity of hair cosmetics, since this indicator affects the product's effectiveness.
WHO/Europe report warns of lethal levels of salt consumption and uncontrolled high blood pressure
Pediatric heart surgeries in Bulgaria have been temporarily halted due to a critical shortage of nurses
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued a warning regarding a new mutation of the virus responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic, known as the FLiRT variants
In response to the threat of a whooping cough epidemic, Bulgaria has enacted temporary anti-epidemic measures aimed at curbing the spread of the disease
Bulgaria has updated its immunization calendar, granting general practitioners the authority to administer whooping cough (pertussis) vaccines to newborns two weeks earlier than before, starting at six weeks after birth
Sofia Airport's Terminal 3 Construction Set to Begin in Early 2026
COVID-19 Impact: Bulgaria's Grim Milestone as Highest Death Rate in EU