Tag: hospitals

  • New procedure for Covid-19 patients with mild or no symptoms

    New procedure for Covid-19 patients with mild or no symptoms

    Severely underfinanced for years, the Romanian healthcare system is one of the worst performing in Europe, and its many problems surface mostly in crisis situations, such as the coronavirus pandemic. Thus, at present, the number of available hospital beds for the people infected with Covid-19 is insufficient, given the increasing number of patients.



    Previously ordering the hospitalisation of all people infected, including the ones with mild or no symptoms, authorities have now decided that these two categories should be treated at home, in order to ease the pressure put on hospitals. In keeping with a new order of the Health Minister, people who test positive to the virus must notify their general practitioner. The latter must monitor their health and announce the Public Health Department. People with mild or no symptoms can isolate themselves at home or at an address supplied to the authorities. People with no symptoms but with underlying health conditions, at their request and upon the reccomendation of the general practitioner, will be taken to Covid hospitals for medical tests and then, with their consent, comitted to Covid phase I or phase II hospitals that have intensive care units or to support hospitals in case the Covid hospitals do not have ICUs.



    However, it is also possible not to have enough beds in ICUs for patients in critical condition or enough medical staff. That is why, the Government has adopted a draft emergency order allowing the direct hiring, at the Gerota Hospital in Bucharest, of 200 physicians who completed their intership and are specialised in intensive care, emergency, infectious disease, epidemiology and radiology. For six months, the 200 physicians can be transffered, by order of the chief of the Department for Emergencies, to any medical unit in need of staff. When the period for which they were hired expires, these physicians can be hired for an indefinite period in the medical units that have vacancies.


    (Translated by Elena Enache)





  • New measures to contain the pandemic

    New measures to contain the pandemic

    The
    Romanian executive on Thursday endorsed several measures aimed at assisting population
    during the pandemic. The measures are about increasing the hospitals capability
    to treat Covid-19 infections in their IC units, which the country’s Prime
    Minister Ludovic Orban describes as the government’s key objective.






    An emergency
    ordinance has been endorsed allowing for the patients with mild forms of
    infection to be treated at home under the surveillance of family physicians.
    Health Minister Nelu Tataru had earlier made an announcement about the
    aforementioned ordinance against the shortage of beds in hospitals to treat the
    infection. The present shortage of medical personnel has promoted the government
    to discuss the idea of hiring 200 young physicians who have completed their
    residency and are going to specialize in Intensive Care, ER, Pulmonology,
    Infectious Diseases, Epidemiology and Radiology.






    These physicians will be able
    to get jobs in hospitals with job vacancy after a period of 6 months in an ER
    unit in Bucharest. During the same session the government endorsed an emergency
    ordinance on paid days off for parents who are staying at home with their
    children after their schools have been closed down because of the pandemic.




    The Labour Ministry is already
    paying parents whose children are at home because their schools are struggling
    to contain an outbreak. Under the
    endorsed ordinance, these payments have been extended to also comprise schools
    in the yellow or green zones in terms of gravity. Labour Minister Violeta Alexandru
    has given assurances that all the situations schools might get in will be
    covered.








    As for
    the economic environment, the government endorsed an emergency ordinance
    proposed by the Finance Ministry on rescheduling debts accumulated by companies
    since the onset of the state of emergency until October 25th.
    December 15th is the deadline for enterprises to apply for a rescheduling
    in the next year. Finance Minister Florin Citu has presented fresh elements
    comprised by the emergency ordinance endorsed.






    Florin
    Cîțu: Conditions have been improved a little bit. No
    more forced executions until December 25th, and between October 26th
    and December 25th no interest or penalties for these tax
    liabilities, since the beginning of the state of emergency until December 25th.
    After another round of talks with companies, we have added an extended period
    for VAT payment until January 25th.






    Florin
    Cîțu had earlier announced these economic measures aimed at boosting the
    business environment and Romania’s economy during the Covid-19 pandemic.




    (translated by bill)

  • Code-red restrictions extend to other counties

    Code-red restrictions extend to other counties

    Apart from
    Bucharest, several towns in Romania have switched to code red after the Group
    for Strategic Communication announced an infection rate close to 3 per thousand
    inhabitants. Over half of Romania’s counties have already exceeded 1.5
    infections per thousand inhabitants. Over 10,000 people are hospitalized across
    the country, of which several hundred in intensive care. Every day comes with
    new reports of dozens of fatalities, and the total death toll since the start
    of the pandemic is close to 6,000. According to a weekly report released by the
    Institute of Public Health, last week the number of new cases continued to go
    up, although at a slower pace.

    Nearly a third of new infections were reported
    in Bucharest as well as in Iaşi, Timiş and Dolj counties. One in 32 infections
    is a medical staff, while over 95% of people who died to COVID-19 had at least
    one other associated illness. Following an assessment of the Health Ministry
    and the Department for Emergency Situations, another 100 beds will be made
    available in ITUs in Bucharest. Other counties too are taking similar measures
    amidst a surge in serious cases of COVID-19. Authorities are also considering
    increasing the numbers of doctors and nurses treating infected people.

    Health
    Minister Nelu Tătaru announced 200 resident doctors and specialists who passed
    an exam in intensive care, emergency care, epidemiology, infectious disease,
    pulmonology and radiology and who are currently unassigned will be moved to an
    emergency hospital in the capital city, pending their appointment to hospitals
    reporting shortages of medical personnel. Moreover, the Health Ministry has
    decided to transform a number of hospitals in Bucharest into COVID-19 treatment
    hospitals. The decision comes as hospitals are finding it increasingly hard to
    deal with the large numbers of infections. Minister Nelu Tătaru recently said
    that patients who test positive, but also those who exhibit no symptoms of
    illness, would be sent home for evaluation and transferred into the care of
    family physicians for monitoring.

    On the other hand, some hospitals have suspended
    all admissions or limited their activity for 14 days in various wards after
    several of their employees tested positive for coronavirus. Earlier this week
    Bucharest switched to the code red level of restrictions after the rate of
    infection reported in the last 14 days exceeded 3 per thousand inhabitants. As
    of Monday, face masks are mandatory in all enclosed and open spaces, while restaurants,
    coffee shops, cinemas, performance halls and gambling outlets were closed down.
    Finally, nursery schools, primary schools and high schools have switched to
    online teaching.


    (Translated by
    V. Palcu)



  • Intensive care units, under pressure

    Intensive care units, under pressure

    The recent surge in the number of coronavirus infection cases in Europe may lead, in a few weeks time, to the overcrowding of intensive care units. This is the warning coming from the World Health Organisation against the backdrop of the growing number of COVID-19 hospitalisations.



    Romania is currently experiencing the most difficult period since the start of the healthcare crisis in late February, with record-high numbers of cases and of patients in intensive care. Specifically, last week the number of new daily cases was around 4,000, with the capital city Bucharest ranking first by number of COVID-19 patients. Also, the number of patients in ICUs at national level is around 750.



    The Bucharest prefect Gheorghe Cojanu has already announced that there are no more available beds in dedicated hospitals. As a result, the decision was made that as of Monday another hospital, Colentina, would receive Sars-Cov-2 patients exclusively.



    Gheorghe Cojanu: “In Bucharest there are no more beds available in ICUs. This is a rather serious problem, which is why [state secretary] Raed Arafat announced us that a document has already been signed, for Colentina hospital to be exclusively receiving COVID-19 patients. So there will be 300 – 400 beds available for these patients. Also, Elias hospital has a modular unit which has been operating on short periods, because they did not have medical staff on a permanent basis, and an order has been given for Floreasca and Elias hospitals to provide medical staff to that unit.



    According to prefect Gheorghe Cojanu, the physicians and nurses working in the schools that have switched to online classes and no longer work directly with children will be transferred to coronavirus hospitals.



    Iaşi, the largest city in the east of Romania, is facing the same problems as Bucharest does. In Iaşi as well, all ICUs are full. Of the total number of 41 intensive care beds, the last 10 were occupied this weekend. The solution, i.e. 24 additional beds, was supposed to be a mobile hospital opened on Friday, but the oxygen generator broke down and it may take around 2 weeks to fix it. Meanwhile, local authorities have decided to open 2 intensive care units for Covid-19 patients in other hospitals in the region. But until these are operational, severe cases will be transferred to other medical units in the country. (translated by: A.M. Popescu)

  • Informal payments in public healthcare

    Informal payments in public healthcare

    Informal payments to physicians or, as we usually call them, bribes or “envelopes,” have long been a scourge engulfing the public healthcare system. According to an opinion poll run in 2013, over 60% of the Romanians said they had given money or presents to physicians. Of them, some 66% chose to reward healthcare staff of their own volition, whereas 31.4% were asked to make such payments. More than 57% of the interviewees believed giving money to physicians was necessary in order to receive quality care, whereas 42% of them said proper care did not depend on prior informal payments.



    It was reluctantly and after long hesitation that the authorities eventually acknowledged this well-known and widespread practice, and only a few years ago did they begin to talk openly about it. At present the Healthcare Ministry sends a feedback form to the patients leaving public hospitals, asking them, among other things, whether they had been asked for undue payments.



    A recent independent journalism project, called “Inclusive,” brought together the Healthcare Minister Sorina Pintea, and Florin Chirculescu, head of thoracic surgery with the Bucharest University Hospital, to talk with students and with former and future patients about bribe in hospitals. Admitting that this phenomenon is a fact, the Healthcare Minister believes hospital managers must be aware that it exists, if they are to take measures against it.



    Sorina Pintea: “The first to know that this happens is the manager of a hospital. Everybody talks about it, everybody knows about it, but when you ask concrete questions, nobody says anything. For example, I’ve read the latest report based on patient feedback forms. One of the questions we ask people when they go out of hospital is, “Were you asked for money or presents by physicians and nurses?” We received 153 “yes” text messages, versus 4,265 that said “no”. Of the people who submitted the same form online, 400 answered yes, and 13,564 answered no. Another question was whether they were willing to report the bribe requests to the Ministry’s anti-corruption department. There were 120 former patients who texted back “yes”, as opposed to 4,166 who declined, whereas on the website we received 358 affirmative answers and 13,359 negative ones.”



    What is it that makes people reluctant to admitting that they do give physicians the infamous envelopes? It may be a sense of complicity to an illegal act, or perhaps the feeling that this is about something for which we have no responsibility… Or, more likely, the idea that in the Romanian public healthcare system, patients and their relatives are victims in several respects: on the one hand, they are the victims of the disease that brings them to hospital, on the other hand, they are the victims of a vicious circle of corruption which started during the communist era, when connections and elaborate survival strategies were the prerequisites of a barely decent life, and which has grown stronger ever since. Public hospitals, more often than not obsolete, under-equipped and hardly up to minimal hygiene standards, only deepen people’s sense of insecurity and the need to counter possible risks by whatever means they can.



    But perhaps the prevailing emotion in such situations is fear. And in turn, fear leads to further irrational responses. Eventually, if and when all ends well, people feel they must express their gratitude for the physicians. This blend of fear, uncertainty induced by a low-quality healthcare system and the wish to express some gratitude, fuels the common occurrence of bribe-giving.



    But how are things perceived on the other side of the line? What do physicians feel, when they receive these tips? For a long while, the few who talked openly about it blamed it all on the small salaries. Which is not the case anymore, given that healthcare salaries have been substantially increased in recent years. And still, money still changes hands in hospitals. Surgeon Florin Chirculescu admits that he often accepted money, although he never made his services conditional on this.



    Florin Chirculescu: “This happened when I was making 2,100 lei per month and mine was the only income in the family. And I was working 80 hours a week. So I was happy about the salary increases, about every pay raise physicians got, because each of them brought me closer to the freedom of saying ‘no’ to bribe and of believing what I say. I must admit that sometimes I turned down such informal payments, although I would have liked and needed them. It is hard to spend all your time in hospital and to live on 2,100 lei.”



    Although he admits that when taking the money he felt shame, dr. Chirculescu says he could not resist the temptation, especially when there was a risk of upsetting the “donor”:



    Florin Chirculescu: “I didn’t feel ok. I think my ears were burning, this is what I felt. Now, because I have the financial independence that allows me to see this with different eyes, something else happens: people seem disappointed if you turn them down. When you don’t take their money, people think it is because things are not going well for the patient in question. And if this happens in the presence of the patient, it’s even worse. I am not making excuses, it’s just a fact.”



    This is why, dr. Florin Chirculescu explains, it is the duty of the healthcare staff to define their relationship with patients within an ethical framework:



    Florin Chirculescu: “When a person is ill, they lose much of their freedom, much of their confidence in themselves and in the rest of the world. When they come to the doctor, a power relationship takes shape, with the physician in a power position. If, in this situation, a physician takes advantage of this—and I don’t mean necessarily money, but also ego and vanity—then that physician is a pig.”



    Even if salaries have gone up, giving and receiving undue payments in hospitals is an occurrence that will take a while to do away with, Healthcare Minister Sorina Pintea believes:



    Sorina Pintea: “I believe this phenomenon will not disappear very soon. If we promote this kind of message, that ‘in this hospital bribery is not accepted’, it may eventually take root in people’s minds. But it will take a while. Making physicians’ salaries public may also help. People know salaries have been raised, but they don’t know exactly how much. Hospitals have to post net incomes on their home pages, not by individual names, but by position and qualifications.”



    Putting an end to corruption in the public healthcare system also depends on both patients and physicians being able to refrain from resorting to the dishonorable envelopes.



    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • June 21, 2019 UPDATE

    June 21, 2019 UPDATE

    EU The president of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker and the president of the European Council Donald Tusk hailed at the end of the Community summit on Friday in Brussels what they called a successful presidency of the Council of the EU on Romanias part. In turn, the president of Romania Klaus Iohannis presented a report on the Romanian semester and said the strategic agenda adopted by the EU leaders on Thursday fully reflects the 10 commitments included in the Sibiu Summit Declaration in May. He also voiced his satisfaction with the fact that, at his request, the EU leaders agreed to include the consolidation of support for the Republic of Moldova.




    HACKERS The perpetrators of the recent cyber-attacks on Romanian hospitals might be Chinese, experts with the Romanian Intelligence Services Cyberint Centre announced on Friday. The suspicion is based on the time when the hackers were active and on clues in the ransom messages. Four hospitals, in Bucharest, Husi, Dorohoi (in the north-east) and Alba (centre) were affected by Bad Rabbit 4. The attacks caused problems in the activity of the targeted hospitals, with delays in patient admission and discharge and in the issue of prescriptions.




    5G Romania joined the 12 developed states that have introduced 5G strategies in mobile telephony, which greatly increases rates of data transfer for mobile devices. A decision to this end was made in Thursdays government meeting, upon proposal by the Ministry of Communications. The ministry said in a press release that the 5G strategy for Romania had been the object of wider public debate, including proposals from industry and experts. In principle, Romania wants to launch such networks next year, with 5G coverage of all urban centres and the main roadways by 2025. It is estimated that this new technology will create over 250.000 jobs in Romania, with benefits amounting to 5 billion Euro.




    EUROPEAN GAMES The 2nd edition of the European Games began in Minsk, Belarus on June 21st. Until June 30th, 4,000 athletes from 50 countries will compete in 15 sports. Romania is represented by 123 athletes. The results in athletics, badminton, cycling, judo, karate, table tennis, archery and shooting will count towards qualification in next years Olympic Games in Tokyo. In the first edition of the European Games, held in Baku in 2015, Romanias Olympic team won 12 medals: 3 gold, 5 silver and 4 bronze.




    HANDBALL Lots were drawn in Tokyo on Friday for the four groups of the Worlds Women Handball Championships due to unfold between November 30th and December 15th. Romanias national side has been included in Group C together with Hungary, Spain, Montenegro, Senegal and Kazakhstan. The top three sides in these groups will qualify for the two main groups of the competition. Japan, as a host country, France, the world defending champions, Romania, Russia and the Netherlands (thanks to their good results in the European Championships) have directly qualified for the final tournament.



    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • New investments in Romanian hospitals

    New investments in Romanian hospitals

    Massive investments will be made this year in Romanian hospitals, so as to enable physicians to provide high-quality care to patients, the Healthcare Minister Sorina Pintea announced. She explained that the investments consist in construction, extension and revamping, and equipment procurement, and will target both the hospitals run by the Ministry, and the ones managed by local authorities. This means that the money will be channelled not only into emergency hospitals, but also in the smaller, town and city hospitals, which must be able to provide support to the big healthcare units.



    The Ministrys investment budget this year is around 210 million euros, as against a rough 200 million euros earmarked last year. The Healthcare Minister also added that, under an agreement with the World Bank, Romania benefits from a total amount of 79 million euros, over half of which already earmarked in 2018, with another 63 million euro worth of investments scheduled for this year.



    Sorina Pintea: “In 2019, 2 emergency care units will be built, one in Oradea, worth 2.8 million euros, and another one in Brasov, worth 2.2 million euros. Also this year, we will have the radiotherapy bunker ready at the Cluj Oncology Institute, following a 1.1-million euro investment. Partnerships with local authorities will also help finance the design and construction works for further developing the radiotherapy network in Targu Mures, Timisoara, Iasi, and Bucharest, in a total investment of 8 million euros.



    The Healthcare Minister also added that modern radiation therapy equipment worth 20 million euros will be purchased for several oncology institutes in the country. Four centres using high-quality equipment for the treatment of severe burns are also scheduled to become operational as of 2020. Sorina Pintea went on to say that 2 of them will be located in Bucharest, and one each in Timisoara and Targu Mures. Feasibility contracts have also been signed for these projects.



    On the other hand, Pintea spoke about the authorities lack of involvement in setting up units for major burns treatment since the Colectiv tragedy in Bucharest. On October 30, 2015, during a rock concert, a fire caused by a fireworks show led to the death of 64 people and left nearly 200 others injured.



    Sorina Pintea: “Of course the authorities should have been more involved, since the Colectiv incident. All I can tell you at this point is that, according to the architects, we do have state-of-the-art centres, with high-quality equipment, but we dont have the staff to work there.



    According to Sorina Pintea, under the same agreement with the World Bank, a team of Romanian physicians and nurses are in France these days, for training in major burns treatment.



    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • Newborn Health in Romania

    Newborn Health in Romania

    The proper equipping of neonatal clinics is essential for the good management of premature birth cases. In Romania, the neonatal mortality rate is twice the European average. This rate is a good indicator of the gap between Romania and the more developed European countries. In Romanias poor counties, the neonatal mortality rate is double the one in the big cities, where neonatal clinics have modern medical equipment, according to a report by Salvati Copiii Association. Gabriela Alexandrescu, executive president of Salvati Copiii, tells us more about it:



    Gabriela Alexandrescu: “A national equipping program has not been implemented in Romania since 2007. Given the high number of premature birth cases, the equipment was intensely used. Moreover, the number of beds in neonatal ICUs is half the one needed. Consequently, many departments received more newborns than they were able to accommodate. The lack of equipment able to provide vital support was one of the causes. Another cause is the education of mothers, the number of visits to general practitioners and scarce pregnancy monitoring. Almost half of the pregnancies in Romania are not monitored by a physician. A lot of women give birth in maternity hospitals that do not have the equipment, the expertise and the legal right to care for newborns weighing less than one and a half kilos.



    As for the causes of child mortality in Romania, Gabriela Alexandrescu says they are social and cultural, but are also related to the lack of medical services in the less developed regions of Romania.



    Gabriela Alexandrescu: “It is a cluster of factors: education, the lack of basic services at the level of communities, especially in rural communities, where there is a major shortage of family physicians, a shortage of check-up procedures for pregnant women, many womens impossibility to travel to town to have their pregnancy tests. This has created a pretty difficult situation for families in Romania. The reported infant mortality rate has doubled, we also have discrepancies across the country, between various counties. We have more than 23 counties where the reported mortality rate lies above the rate at national level, with the counties of Botosani and Calarasi sadly being at the top of the list. Mortality rates for these counties are 3 times higher than in Cluj or Bucharest.



    In 2017, the child mortality rate stood at 7.2 per one thousand live births, with premature birth being the main cause of death. Salvati Copiii Association got actively involved in the efforts to properly supply medical units with the required equipment.



    Gabriela Alexandrescu: “We at Salvatii Copiii Association have been trying to make up for that kind of shortage. In recent years, since 2012, we have donated more than 515 pieces of equipment to 88 maternity hospitals, for 42,000 newborns. We have invested more than 4 million Euros, which we have received from corporate and individual donors. Everything was done with the support of people from Romania. Because we have seen and understood that, rather than waiting for the ministry and the authorities to earmark the sums needed, it was in our power to save our children. If we are unable to ensure our childrens right to live, what else is there worth talking about?



    In Romania, there are many cases of congenital heart defects among newborns. Many children are born with such problems and the only hospital where they can have treatment immediately after they were born is the Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases and Transplant in Targu Mures. The medical staff there works on a 24/7 basis, yet their effort is not enough. Out of the around 1,000 heart surgeries per year that are necessary, the hospital in Targu Mures only conducts around 230. Meanwhile, other doctors face equipment shortages. Here is the head of Neonatal Clinic of the University Emergency Hospital in Bucharest, Adriana Dan, with details:



    Adriana Dan: “Neonatal hospitals in Romania are rated according to levels of competence and facilities. There are relatively few 3rd-degree maternities, the best-equipped and best-prepared in terms of human resources. There are around twenty such units in Romania. They are capable of providing care in the premature births with the greatest needs. We run with limited, obsolete and overused equipment. In order for premature babies to survive, it is essential that we have incubators, ventilators, vital functions monitoring equipment, high-quality single-use consumables to prevent the multiple complications that infants with weak immune systems may have.



    We also asked Adriana Dan what neonatologists feel when they succeed in their profession in spite of the shortcomings in the healthcare system:



    Adriana Dan: “On one hand, we are happy that we can help a frail soul and a family that has so much wanted and expected this child. On the other hand, it is a matter of professional pride, when we see that what we do is important. At our annual meetings on November 17, when World Prematurity Day is celebrated, we get to meet the children we have saved and who are two, five years old or have even reached school age. It is such a joy to be able to know that part of what a child is has been possible thanks to you. It is something special.



    This kind of satisfaction will most likely be only felt by a physician who saves the life of a newborn. But for more such performances, Romania needs state-of-the art neonatal hospitals. In 2019, “Salvati Copiii Romania is purchasing equipment for 49 maternity hospitals.



    (translated by: Elena Enache, Eugen Nasta)

  • Public-private partnership in infrastructure development in Romania

    Public-private partnership in infrastructure development in Romania

    Despite daily political scandals involving the countrys president Klaus Iohannis supported by the right wing opposition, on the one hand, and the ruling coalition formed by the Social Democratic Party and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats on the other, in Bucharest the Government carries on, minding its business. At least this is what the deputy prime-minister Viorel Stefan stated on Tuesday, when he presented the strategic projects that are to be commenced shortly, based on the new legislation on public-private partnership.



    Essentially, the government plans to build three motorways, to modernize 15 hospitals and to build a large medical compound. But lets see what the government means when talking about motorways. The first one will link the city of Ploiesti, in the south, to Brasov, in the centre. A second one will connect Targu Neamt and Iasi to Ungheni, in the Republic of Moldova, while in the south a third one will make the connection between Bucharest, Craiova, Drobeta Turnu Severin and Lugoj.



    Viorel Stefan stated that the 100 km long eastern motorway will also include a bridge over Prut River, which will connect it with the road infrastructure in the neighboring Republic of Moldova. The one in the south is aimed to help develop tourism, mainly because it will be connected to the section that exists already in the south, known as the ‘Sun Motorway, which links the capital city to the Black Sea Coast.



    Viorel Stefan: “The South Motorway, 550 km long, is an important project for many investors, who have already invested quite heavily in the area, more specifically in Craiova and the surroundings. Lets not forget that this motorway will help increase the tourist potential in the Danube Gorges. Moreover, it will secure the link with Serbia, Bulgaria and the 4th Pan-European Corridor in Lugoj.



    The government also plans to modernize 15 hospitals owned by the Romanian Freight Company and managed by the Transport Ministry and to build the Carol Davila healthcare compound, on some 300 hectares in Bucharest. The compound will include the Republican Hospital, with a capacity of 3,000 beds and 37 operating theatres. Also, a Medical School and student dorms will be built, as well as residential and shopping facilities for the staff, parking lots and a hotel for those who accompany the patients.



    All the projects presented on Tuesday and dubbed ‘strategic will require substantial expenses, of 15 to 20 billion Euros. The works are to start next year, and scheduled to complete in five years for the motorways, three years for the Republican Hospital and seven years for the Carol Davila compound. The Government, the deputy prime-minister Viorel Stefan also said, is determined to make up for the decade-long delays in the building of the countrys infrastructure.


    (translated by: Mihaela Ignatescu)

  • November 3, 2016 UPDATE

    November 3, 2016 UPDATE

    ORDER The activity of the National Anti-corruption Directorate ‘is annoying many people who believed they were untouchable’, the head of Romania’s anti-corruption agency (DNA), Laura Codruta Kovesi, said in Bucharest on Thursday, while receiving the Order of the Polar Star granted by the king of Sweden. Kovesi added that the Order is equally the merit of her colleagues, being a constant recognition of their efforts to fight high-level graft with professionalism and correctness. Sweden’s ambassador in Bucharest, Anneli Lindahl Kenny said the Order is being granted to the DNA chief ‘for bravely and consistently fighting corruption.’



    BREXIT Parliament in Britain must vote on launching the procedures for leaving the European Union, the High Court in London on Thursday ruled. Under the ruling, the government cannot trigger article 50 on its own. Judges in London ruled the Prime Minister does not have the right to use the Royal Prerogative to invoke Article 50 to leave the EU without involving MPs and peers, a decision, which throws into confusion whether the Prime Minister can stick to her timetable to trigger Article 50 by the end of March.



    STRIKE The strike mounted by the state hospital employees in Romania is illegal, the Bucharest Court ruled on Thursday. The ruling isn’t definitive but is enforceable. So, the magistrates ruled in favour of the Health Ministry, which pointed to the fact that the trade unions had failed to comply with the legal conditions needed for the strike. We recall that medical workers in Romania went on a strike on October 31st claiming better pay and improved conditions. The protest was suspended on November 1st after Parliament committees had approved higher pays for the employees in the system and trade unions had been given assurances the amendments would be endorsed next week. Labor Minister Dragos Paslaru has cautioned the latest pay rises could bear on the country’s economy.



    FORUM Romania will become a major actor on the European digital market and will contribute to the plan to have a vibrant European Union, according to statements made in Bucharest on Thursday by the European Commissioner for Digital Economy and Society, Gunther Oettinger. The European official attended the opening of the Digital Romania — Industry 4.0 International Forum, joining President Klaus Iohannis and Prime Minister Dacian Ciolos. The event brings together around 250 representatives of the IT field from both the public and the private sector. The Romanian head of state believes that digitization is not only a means for growth in industry and agriculture, but also an instrument for better public policies to the benefit of citizens.



  • The Disinfectants Scandal

    The Disinfectants Scandal

    Within months of the deadly fire at the Colectiv nightclub in Bucharest, which killed 64 people and raised questions regarding the flaws in the healthcare system, a new scandal involving the Health Ministry has surfaced. An independent investigation by journalists with the Gazeta Sporturilor newspaper revealed that the main producer and distributor of disinfectants used in Romanian hospitals was supplying products with a much lower concentration than stipulated on the label. The authorities collected samples from hospitals, and tests revealed however that the disinfectants used by the medical and nursing staff were efficient in 95% of the cases. Health Minister Patriciu Achimas-Cadariu gave assurances that patients are in safe hands for the time being.



    Still, the investigation into the case is far from being over. Romania presently has no possibility to run physical and chemical testing on the disinfectants used in hospitals. Prime Minister Dacian Ciolos has called on the Health Minister to come up with a solution in this respect in the shortest time possible.



    In another development, the Prosecutor Generals Office has launched its own investigation. Of the 3,500 samples collected from the hands of medical staff, surfaces and objects in 300 hospitals, less than 5% tested non-compliant.



    Patriciu Achimas Cadariu: “The testing was carried out in the laboratories of healthcare units, public health directorates and in private laboratories. We tested to see how the disinfectant was used in the cleaning process and whether it was successful in destroying bacteria on hands and objects.



    The company in question is supplying 350 hospitals all across Romania, and its antiseptics are being used in over 2,000 operating theaters, as the manufacturer itself claims. The products are used in surgical hand scrubbing and to clean operating tables and disinfect scalpels. Moreover, they are also used in cleaning regular wards and ICU.



    Company representatives have put the distribution on hold and taken steps to shed light on this matter. The company has collected samples from multiple batches of disinfectants and sent them for testing in laboratories in Germany. One of the immediate effects of these tests is that hospital managers may now freely discard antiseptics that have proved ineffective. In a 2014 report of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, Romania ranked first in terms of the resistance of healthcare-associated bacteria to any type of medical treatment. According to official statistics, some 3.8 million Romanians receive in-hospital care every year, and one-fifth of them are children.