Tag: breast cancer

  • October 2, 2018 UPDATE

    October 2, 2018 UPDATE




    BUCHAREST – According to
    President Klaus Iohannis, Romania supports a close cooperation between the EU
    and Great Britain after Brexit and Bucharest is interested in an agreement on
    foreign security. Also with regard to Brexit, the president has stated that
    Romania firmly supports the importance of negotiating an ambitions regulation
    framework regarding citizens’ mobility, by observing the principles of
    reciprocity and non-discrimination. The statements were made during the meeting
    in Bucharest with the EU’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier. Barnier stated in
    turn that Romania, as holder of the presidency of the EU Council in the first
    half of 2019, will play a major role in ensuring the necessary institutional
    framework that would ensure an ordered withdrawal of the UK and also the smooth
    running of negotiations on the future relations between the EU and the UK. Also
    on Tuesday, Barnier met with the Romanian Prime Minister Viorica Dancila, who
    stated that Romania was interested in having all Romanian citizens residing in
    Great Britain continue to live, work and study as before.










    BREXIT – British PM
    Theresa May announced on Tuesday new regulations for migration in the UK, to
    come into effect after Brexit, favoring qualified workers. Details will be
    provided in a speech to be held on Wednesday at the Conservative Party congress
    in Birmingham. According to the new regulations, people who want to settle in
    Great Britain will have to have a minimum level of income in order to guarantee
    they would not take jobs away from British citizens. Student visas are not
    subject to those regulations. EU citizens are right now free to move to the UK,
    which will no longer be the case after Brexit, planned to come into effect in
    2020.










    RULE OF LAW – Romanian PM
    Viorica Dancila and Justice Minister Tudorel Toader will attend in Strasbourg on
    Wednesday the debates in the European Parliament regarding the rule of law in
    Romania. On Monday, the Civil Liberties Committee of the European Parliament
    was the venue for debates between Euro MPs of various political parties and the
    First Vice-President of the EC Frans Timmermans. The latter said that the changes made by
    the authorities in Bucharest in terms of the judiciary worried not only
    Romanians, many of whom took to the streets to protest, but the entire EU.
    Frans Timmermans said that if the EC concluded that European common rules were
    violated, it would not hesitate to bring the Romanian Government to court.












    VAT – The European
    Commission will support Romania in combating VAT fraud, given that the country registers
    a 36% collection deficit, said on Tuesday the Romanian Finance Minister Eugen
    Teodorovici. The statement was made after the meeting Teodorovici had in
    Luxembourg with Pierre Moscovici, the European Commissioner for Economic and
    Financial Affairs, Taxation and Customs. At the meeting, Teodorovici assured
    the EU official that the Romanian presidency of the EU Council will promote the
    solving of VAT-related cases, with focus on the reform of VAT quotas. In
    another move, Commissioner Moscovici accepted the invitation extended by
    Teodorovici to pay a visit to Romania in November.






    MOTION – On Tuesday, the
    Romanian Senate rejected the simple motion filed by the opposition National
    Liberal Party and Save Romania Union against the Transport Minister Lucian
    Sova. The signatories accused him of mismanagement of the country’s roads and
    railroads. A similar vote will be held in the Chamber of Deputies on Wednesday,
    this time against the Finance Minister Eugen Teodorovici. According to the Liberals,
    Teaodorovici must answer for the failure of the fiscal and taxation strategy.






    APPOINTMENT – On Tuesday,
    Romania’s president Klaus Iohannis signed the decree appointing the Minister of
    European Funds, Rovana Plumb, as interim Minister of Education. The holder of
    the office, Valentin Popa, announced his resignation last week, after a meeting
    with the leader of the Social Democratic Party Liviu Dragnea. That was the
    second resignation in the cabinet headed by Viorica Dancila, after the one of the Research
    Minister Nicolae Burnete.










    NOBEL – The US scientist
    Arthur Ashkin has won the Nobel Prize for physics, alongside Gerard Mourou of
    France and Donna Strickland of Canada, for research into laser physics, which
    the Swedish Royal Academy of Science deemed revolutionary. This year’s Nobel
    Prize season opened on Monday with the announcement for the Nobel Prize in
    medicine. US researcher James P. Allison and Japanese researcher Tasuku Honjo
    were granted the prize for new cancer therapies. On Wednesday, the prize for
    chemistry will be announced, while on Friday the Nobel Peace Prize will be
    awarded. The prize for literature will not be awarded in 2018, for the first
    time after almost 70 years.






    HEALTHCARE – The month of
    October is dedicated to the fight against breast cancer. Organizations all
    across the world are encouraging education and research regarding this danger. The
    Romanian Health Minister Sorina Pintea has stated that almost 9,000 cases of
    breast cancer are diagnosed annually in the country, of which 3,000 fatal.
    According to the minister, many of them could be prevented through regular
    check-ups.

  • Worrying medical statistics

    Worrying medical statistics


    The
    Breast Cancer Awareness Month, marked in countries across the world every October,
    is dedicated to actions meant to raise awareness over the danger posed by this
    disease. Statistics show that only two thirds of women with breast cancer are
    over 50, the rest of them being 39 to 49. In Romania, in spite of a smaller
    number of cases as compared to other European countries, the number of deaths
    caused by this disease has doubled in the past 50 years and figures show that
    almost 10 thousand new cases are diagnosed every year. Romanian Health
    Minister, Sorina Pintea, says that education, prevention and the early
    detection of this disease are crucial, given its growing incidence. Sorina
    Pintea:


    Cancer
    is usually detected in its 3rd or 4th stage, which is
    very late. We have started, as of May, a screening programme financed from
    European funds, worth 21 million euros, that will help 40 thousand women from
    the most underprivileged category. The programme addresses both insured and
    uninsured patients, which is very important. Specialists say this form of
    cancer is detected in increasingly younger women and not only in women aged
    around 50, as it was the case before.


    Cardiologists
    don’t have good news either. They say that in Romania, cardiovascular diseases (CVD)
    are the leading cause of death – 60% of the total number, and three times more
    than the deaths from cancer. The head of the Romanian Society of Cardiology,
    Dragos Vinereanu, signals the fact that the number of deaths caused by CVDs is
    the main reason for life expectancy in Romania being by around 10 years lower
    than in the other EU countries. Dragos Vinereanu made this statement on
    September 29th, on World Heart Day, when he also said that CVDs kill
    an increasing number of people aged around 30. In his opinion, the current
    situation is closely related to the severe under-financing of the Romanian
    health system, one of the smallest in the EU. Our weak point is early
    prevention, although the impact of early prevention measures is less costly and
    more effective,’ Dragos Vinereanu has also said.

    (Translated by E. Enache)