Tag: disease

  • A National Anti-cancer Plan

    A National Anti-cancer Plan

    According to centralized
    data, cancer remains a major health issue at world level being among the main causes
    of premature deaths in people with ages between 30 and 69 in 134 countries,
    Romania included. However, authorities in this country have decided to do more
    for the prevention and treatment of this dreadful disease. An outcome of the
    cooperation between healthcare authorities, physicians – including in the
    private field – and patient associations, the National Plan for the Prevention
    and Combating Cancer is an initiative the Romanian president Klaus Iohannis kicked
    off eleven months ago.




    After passing through all
    the necessary stages, the law endorsing this plan, which is being implemented
    for the period between 2023 and 2030 has been promulgated by president Klaus
    Iohannis.




    Klaus Iohannis: We have the obligation to take action now on behalf
    of those who lost the battle with the illness and those who have been diagnosed
    with this terrible disease. There is remarkable medical progress,
    state-of-the-art technologies, which can turn cancer into a treatable disease.
    And the Romanians have a right to these present day innovations.




    Under the law, all the
    Romanian citizens, residing in Romania, citizens of the EU member countries as
    well as the foreigners and stateless individuals living or residing in Romania
    have a state-guaranteed right to medical and social services comprised by the
    National Plan for Preventing and Combating Cancer. These services include the
    prevention, investigation and treatment of cancer, access to care services,
    including palliative care, psycho-oncology and social services as well as to food
    subsidies.




    Romania is actually
    lining up to the European standards in the field. The move was all the more so
    necessary because statistical figures for Romania were quite alarming, as physician
    Dana Paun, presidential healthcare advisor told Radio Romania.




    Dana Paun: Cancer represents a major
    healthcare issue after cardiovascular diseases and for this reason we needed
    this plan, which comprises very clear objectives. For instance, national
    screening programmes have become operational. We have so far benefitted for
    funding from the Healthcare Ministry only for the uterine cancer, but they want
    to implement screening programmes for other types of cancer. At the same time
    there are plans for a national cancer registry for all the types of cancer
    affecting the Romanians. An inter-disciplinary approach is also under
    discussion as one patient cannot be treated by only one physician. You need a
    team of doctors to study the case and prescribe the treatment, surgery,
    radio-therapy, chemotherapy, so that the patient may benefit from the right
    treatment.




    And since a series of expensive
    innovative therapies have emerged
    and the National Insurance House is unable to cover these new types of
    treatment, there are plans for a healthcare innovation fund to provide the Romanian
    patients access to them.


    (bill)

  • Healthcare endeavours in early 19th century Wallachia

    Healthcare endeavours in early 19th century Wallachia


    The first
    hospitals were established on the premises of monasteries or nearby, on the
    Romanian territory. Monasteries were once places were the physical conditions
    were cured together with the psychological or mental ones. In Bucharest, one
    such treatment place was the Panteleimon Hospital settlement. Initially it was
    placed somewhere outside the city, in the commune of Pantelimon. In time, the
    commune grew into one of Bucharest’s eastern districts. Its name and subsequent
    fame were linked to the Saint Panteleimon Monastery, built in the mid-18th
    century. The foundation deed of the hospital settlement is dated 1731. However,
    the construction proper, for the establishment and for the monastery began in
    1735. It was not until 1750 that the works for the two edifices were completed.
    1735 was a year to remember because of the plague epidemic that broke out that
    year. The epidemic severely affected the downtrodden segment of the population,
    as usual treated on the premises of the monasteries. Actually, ruling prince
    Grigore the 2nd Ghica, the founder of the hospital, ruled that the
    new institution should cure the contagious diseases as well. Subsequently, another
    hospital was built. The new establishment was exclusively dedicated to the contagious
    diseases. The Saint Panteleimon Hospital was dedicated to the more general conditions.
    In the 19th century, the hospital had been going through a series of
    changes. One such change was implemented by one of the first physicians
    schooled in the West, Constantin Caracas. At that time, medical doctors trained
    in the West got involved in the development of the public healthcare system in Wallachia.
    But what exactly happened at that time? Mihaela Diana
    Spranceana
    pursues a Master’s programme with the University of Bucharest’s
    History Faculty.




    Mihaela
    Diana Spranceana:




    In the
    first half of the 19th century, actually in 1832, ruling prince
    Grigore Ghica the 4th had the old hospital taken down, ruling that new
    rooms be built, for a number of 37 patients. In the following years, the number
    of patients was continually growing. Between 1867 and 1869 the hospital was rebuilt
    from scratch and opened with a spare-bed capacity of 80 beds. Admitted to that hospital
    were both male and female patients suffering from chronic diseases that were
    internal, but also external, sexually transmitted diseases as well as ophthalmological
    conditions. Yearly, around 350 patients were treated, while the number of deaths
    per year ranged from 12 to 15, according to the hospital register and the physician
    Constantin Caracas’s accounts. Who were the hospital’s medical doctors, throughout
    the years? On the staff of Saint Panteleimon Hospital were physicians who were famous
    around the country, and among them we would like to mention the names of Dimitrie
    Caracaș, but also that of his son, Constantin Caracaș. As regards the activity of
    medical doctor Constantin Caracaș, what I can say is that he hailed from a
    family of Greek medical doctors. His father as well as his brother were medical
    doctors, and after completing his studies in Vienna he settled in Bucharest where
    he acquired a certain fame also because he implemented and generalized the
    smallpox vaccine.






    Since it belonged to a monastery, the Saint Panteleimon Hospital
    mainly treated the downtrodden. Yet contagious diseases took their toll on the
    entire population, so it was also in the first half of the 19th
    century that the first vaccination campaigns also began in Bucharest. And, just
    as we have found out, medical doctor Caracas was on the frontline. One of the
    old medical documents that has been preserved to this day is the vaccination
    Regulation of 1875.
    Mihaela Diana Sprânceana:




    Article 1 stipulated that
    vaccination was mandatory for the entire population, while article 2 stipulated
    that any given child was to be vaccinated during the first year of his life,
    save for the diseased or the sickly, for whom vaccination was optional. Revaccination
    was made at the age of 7, and during the smallpox epidemic vaccination became
    mandatory. Article 7 clearly stipulated that the persons who failed to produce a
    document proving they had been successfully vaccinated were denied access to all
    public services. It is exactly what happens today with those green passes
    without which you do not get access to malls or certain institutions unless you
    produce them. During the vaccination operation proper and for the control of the
    operation, physicians will be accompanied by a local police agent in urban
    areas, while in the rural communes they are accompanied by the mayor or one of
    his delegates, just as it happens today in the vaccination centres, where the
    police and the gendarmerie are present. The booster rollout, in the urban areas
    will be administered by the town’s physicians, personally, while for the rural
    communes it will be administered by the county’s board-certified physician or
    one of his delegates, twice a year, on previously-set dates.
    As
    for the Saint Panteleimon Foundation, in 1869 it was rebuilt from scratch, this
    time with a spare-bed capacity of 80 beds. During the inter-war years, the
    number of sections grew, including a surgery section, an internal medicine as
    well as a nervous disease service. In the final years of the communist regime,
    and mostly after the 1977 tremor, the hospital and the church were in an advanced
    state of degradation Towards the late 1980s, the hospital and the monastery alike
    were demolished to make room for a hotel-and-restaurant compound, the so-called
    Swan Compound, Complex Lebada in Romanian.

    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)

  • Romanians this year rely on a double quantity of flu vaccines

    Romanians this year rely on a double quantity of flu vaccines

    A free flu vaccination campaign has kicked off in Romania this week,
    after the first batch of doses has been distributed nationwide. For this
    season, the government has bought three million flu shots, double the quantity
    last season in order to ease the people’s access to this treatment and lower
    the risk posed by influenza against the background of the present COVID-19
    pandemic.






    The vaccine doses will be distributed to the Public Health Directions in
    several stages, like in the previous years. On Monday, the Health Ministry
    commenced the distribution of the first 330 thousand doses to the
    aforementioned directions, which will deliver to family physicians and medical
    units for the immunization of their patients.




    The rest are to be distributed in mid-October and in November for the
    immunization of individuals at increased risk of severe disease. People over
    65, those suffering from chronic diseases, particularly respiratory or
    cardiovascular, metabolic issues, children and seniors in foster and retirement
    homes, medical personnel and pregnant women will be given priority, according
    to recommendations from the World Health Organisation and the European Centre
    for Disease Prevention and Control.






    As every year the immunization campaign will be carried out through the
    family physician offices and other medical units. Given the present
    epidemiological situation, experts recommend people outside the high-risk
    category to purchase the flu vaccine.






    The Health Ministry has called on pharmaceutical units across the
    country to get flu vaccine supplies in due time. Flu vaccines have been
    recommended by physicians as the most effective protection method against
    viruses but Romania is presently at the bottom of a European ranking regarding
    the immunization of its senior citizens who are the most vulnerable category.






    According to the latest data released by the EU Statistical Office, only
    a little over a fifth of Romania’s seniors gets flu shots, which accounts for
    half of the EU average. From the EU countries only Latvia, Estonia, Slovakia
    and Lithuania have reported lower percentages than Romania when it comes to
    immunization. Ireland is at the opposite poll with two thirds of its seniors
    vaccinated being followed by the Netherlands, Portugal and Belgium.




    (bill)





  • Romanian authorities call for responsibility

    Romanian authorities call for responsibility

    Given the increase in the number of COVID-19 cases in Romania, the authorities have taken a number of additional special measures, targeting both the people who enter Romanian territory from abroad, and the general public.



    First of all, all citizens, Romanians or foreigners, who come from the so-called “red zones (the entire Italy, Hubei region in China, including the city of Wuhan, and the Cheongdo county and Daegu city in South Korea) will be quarantined for 14 days in special facilities. Those who come from the “yellow zones (continental China, the entire Iran, other counties and localities in South Korea, as well as Heisnberg district in North-Rhine Westphalia in Germany) will be asked to self isolate.



    The relevant bodies will ensure compliance with these measures, and failure to comply will lead to fines of up to 4,000 euros. The fine will be applied on each occasion in case of repeat violations. The head of the Department for Emergencies, Raed Arafat, warned that several such punishments have already been put into practice. He also announced that indoor cultural, scientific, artistic, religious, sports and entertainment activities involving more than 100 people have been restricted until March 31st, and the period may be extended.



    University courses have also been suspended until the end of March, and alternatives such as online programmes have been suggested. Public institutions will have to reorganize working hours, so that employees may come to work at 3 different times during the day, to avoid crowding in public transportation and reduce the risk of infection. As Raed Arafat also said, “we voted to recommend private entities, including business operators with more than 99 employees, to rethink working hours for the staff who use public transportation. This recommendation takes effect in Bucharest and county capitals between March 12th and 31st, and the period may be extended. Raed Arafat also explained that under this guideline, companies will have employees coming to work in 3 separate shifts.



    Exports of pharmaceuticals and medical equipment used in treating the coronavirus disease have also been suspended for 6 months. The products barred from exports include antivirals, anti-inflammatory drugs, antibiotics, fever reducers, antifungal drugs, anesthetics, sedatives, and medical materials such as gloves, syringes, goggles, protective coveralls, disinfectants and so on.



    Authorities also urged people to comply with the recommendations and to get information from official sources exclusively. Romania is now in scenario number 2, with 26-100 infected patients, and prevention is still the main concern, before major changes in hospitals. If quarantine facilities prove to be insufficient, strictly monitored home quarantine may be introduced.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • February 29, 2020

    February 29, 2020

    COVID19 Romania has 3 confirmed cases of COVID-19 infection, with the patients current state reported as good. Another 52 people are quarantined across the country, and 8,796 under home monitoring. The healthcare authorities in the counties Timiş in the west and Maramureş in the north-west are running investigations to establish the people who were in contact with the 2 persons who tested positive for the coronavirus on Friday. Both of them had travelled to Italy recently. The first patient in Romania, a 25 year old man from Gorj County, in the south, is feeling well, and Fridays tests came out negative, doctors say. If the next test is also negative, the patient will be discharged. In Europe, Italy remains the most affected country. As the epidemic spread, stock exchanges across the world reported total losses of over 5 trillion US dollars. The BBC says the US financial markets have not been hit so hard since the 2008 financial crisis. Investors fear that the growing number of coronavirus cases outside China may turn the disease into a pandemic.



    ARREST The former healthcare minister in the Social Democratic government Sorina Pintea, currently the manager of the Baia Mare Emergency Hospital in the north-west of the country, was detained on Saturday by the National Anti-Corruption Directorate for continuing bribe taking. According to the DNA, between December 2019 and February 28, this year, Pintea received 10,000 euros and 25,000 euros from a business operator, in 2 instalments, accounting for 7% of the value of a public procurement contract concerning the design and building of a cardiovascular and thoracic surgery unit. The contract was signed in 2019 by the hospital with the company in question. Pintea allegedly received the money in exchange for completing some of her duties as a manager and authorising officer, anti-corruption prosecutors say. They requested the Bucharest Court to approve a 30-day pre-trial arrest order against Pintea. Sorina Pintea was a healthcare minister in Viorica Dancilas left-wing government dismissed last October.



    DISEASE Romania has too few doctors able to diagnose rare diseases, experts warn today, the International Rare Disease Day. They say investments in medical equipment in the field of genetics, which are vital for accurate diagnoses, are scarce. Physicians also warn that rare disease patients and their families face severe challenges in terms of access to care. So far more than 6,000 different rare diseases have been identified, most of which are without treatment across the world. In Romania, such diseases are underdiagnosed.



    MIGRANTS Greece prevented 4,000 migrants to enter its territory “illegally from Turkey, a spokesman for the Greek government announced on Saturday after an emergency meeting chaired by PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis, AFP and Reuters report. On Friday, the country faced a mass, organised and illegal border crossing attempt, but it managed to overcome it, the government spokesperson explained. He added that Greece protected its borders and the borders of the EU. Also on Saturday, in an address in Istanbul, Turkeys president Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country will open its borders to enable migrants to leave, and criticised the EU for not helping Ankara enough. Turkey says it was forced to ease border controls for the refugees trying to reach the EU from Turkey, because of the pressure of the refugees coming from Syria amid clashes in the rebel stronghold of Idlib.



    SLOVAKIA Slovakia is voting on Saturday for a new Parliament, hoping to fight corruption, frequently linked to the populist, left-of-centre ruling party Smer-SD. The vote may be crucial for the history of the country, which is still outraged by the murder of anti-corruption journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancee in 2018, AFP reports. His killing, ordered by a businessman with political connections, mobilised the public, and polls suggest that the ruling party Smer-SD is running shoulder to shoulder with the centre-right opposition party OLaNO, which turned the fight against corruption into its rallying call. The double murder in 2018 triggered massive street protests against the government, and prime minister Robert Fico had to resign.



    RUSSIA Hundreds of Russian opposition supporters gathered in Moscow on Saturday to protest the constitutional reforms initiated by president Vladimir Putin and to pay tribute to opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, murdered 5 years ago near Kremlin, AFP reports. In Sankt-Petersburg, nearly 2,000 people rallied in the centre of the city. The authorised march is the first important public gathering since Putin announced a Constitution review set to strengthen the role of the president and of the State Council. The killing of Boris Nemtsov in February 2015 had huge echoes in Russia and abroad. Nemtsov was in the middle of an investigation into the involvement of the Russian Army in the east Ukraine war.



    HANDBALL Romanias womens handball champions, CSM Ramnicu Valcea, play today at home against the Swedish side Savehof, in the Champions League Main Group 2. In Main Group 1 in the same competition, vice-champions CSM Bucharest play away from home on Sunday against the French team Metz. The Romanian teams are ranking 4th in their respective groups and CSM is the only one having secured a place in the quarter-finals. In mens handball, champions Dinamo Bucharest take on Sporting Lisbon, on Sunday night, after a 26-25 win away from home. If they go past the Portuguese team, Dinamo move into the Champions League round of 16.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)