Tag: medical

  • November 17, 2024

    November 17, 2024

    VISIT The president of Romania Klaus Iohannis, currently on a visit to Germany, has talks today with the president of the Bundestag, after a meeting with the president of Germany Frank-Walter Steinmeier yesterday in which they discussed security issues and the support Romania and Germany will continue to provide to Ukraine. Klaus Iohannis will give an address today at a ceremony commemorating the victims of war and dictatorship. The Romanian official’s agenda also includes a meeting with the president of the Christian Democratic Union, Friedrich Merz, whose party is seen as the most likely to win the early elections due in February 2025. On Friday, Klaus Iohannis had talks with the German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, with whom he discussed Romania’s full Schengen accession, among other topics.

     

     

    EU Romania’s PM Marcel Ciolacu has a working visit to Brussels scheduled for Monday. He will have meetings with NATO’s new secretary general, Mark Rutte, with the president-elect of the European Council, António Costa and with the president of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola. Marcel Ciolacu is accompanied by a governmental delegation which includes the foreign minister Luminiţa Odobescu and the defence minister Angel Tîlvăr. The visit to Brussels comes ahead of the start of a new EU institutional cycle, following the elections held this June, and ahead of the endorsement of the new Strategic Agenda for 2024-2029.

     

     

    OBITUARY The former gymnastics coach Bela Karoly died at the age of 82. The cause of death has not been made public, but he was known to have had various health problems over the past few years. Bela Karoly coached the world-famous Nadia Comăneci, who got the first “perfect 10” in the history of the Olympic Games in Montreal, in 1976, followed by further outstanding performances. Karoly fell out of favour with the communist regime when he criticised the arbitration at the 1980 Moscow Olympics. A year later he defected to the US, where he came to coach a number of American gymnasts, some of whom became Olympic or world champions. Karoly and his wife chose to stay away from the public eye, after being targeted by allegations regarding the brutal methods he used in training.

     

     

    MEDICAL SCHOOLS In the university cities of Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca (centre), Târgu Mureş (centre), Craiova (south-west), Iaşi (north-east) and Timişoara (west), residency admission exam take place today, with over 10,000 medical school graduates in Romania sitting. They compete over the 4,961 places and 237 positions available, meaning an average 2 candidates per place and 44 candidates per position. The exam is a multiple-choice test with 200 questions in each sub-field and a duration of 4 hours. Romania has been struggling for years with a major shortage of human resources in the healthcare system. According to the National Statistics Institute, at the end of 2023 Romania had 72,740 physicians, i.e. 357 per 100,000 people. This is below countries like Bulgaria (with 480 physicians per 100,000 people), Germany, Spain, Italy, Denmark, Cyprus, Lithuania, Malta, Slovakia, Finland and Sweden.

     

     

    SAVINGS Nearly three-quarters of Romanians are concerned with price increases, and say they will spend less these holidays, according to an EU-wide survey. Moreover, some economists predict a complicated year ahead and call on people to save money. Apart from simple methods like setting a monthly budget and strictly monitoring expenses, experts have a savings solution for low-income categories as well. The Centre for Banking Dispute Settlement recommends the 52-week method, in which a person saves as much money as the number of the week in question, to reach EUR 277 during a year. Nearly 40% of Romanian consumers plan to spend between EUR 100 and 200 for their Christmas shopping.

     

     

    FORESTRY CODE Romania’s new Forestry Code, aimed at preventing wood theft, is waiting for the green light from Parliament’s specialist committees before being discussed in the Chamber of Deputies, the decision-making body in this respect. The draft legislation still requires positive reports from the committees on agriculture and legal affairs, after being approved by the committee on environment. Several amendments have been introduced in the process, concerning among other things the planting of green areas around cities, access to all forests on foot or by bicycle and pre-emptive rights to top-quality materials for Romanian furniture producers. The new law will punish theft by seizure of the wood and of the vehicle used in the theft. A National Forestry Council will also be set up, to monitor compliance with ethical and professional standards among forestry staff. The new Forestry Code is a benchmark in the National Recovery and Resilience Plan, and the government intends to have it endorsed by December. (AMP)

  • Women at the time of the pandemic

    Women at the time of the pandemic


    It has become common knowledge that the pandemic and
    the ensuing restrictions have even to a greater extent affected the already
    vulnerable categories. A case in point is made of the people and the children
    living in the underprivileged rural regions. All this time, the burden on
    women’s shoulders has been heavier than before. Women are subject to payment
    inequality, anyway, let alone the fact that women take a double shift in the
    household. A recent survey carried by the FRAMES market research company
    highlighted the fact that seven of ten women have responded that the pandemic did
    affect their way of life. 65% of those women believe they have been affected by
    the isolation imposed by restrictions. We spoke to company representative
    Adrian Negrescu, who gave us details on the other parameters included in the
    survey.


    Adrian Negrescu:

    58% of the women responded that
    working from home was more like a burden for them all this time, since nobody
    was that much prepared for working from home. We did not have computers; we did
    not have video cameras. Moreover, doing your job while at home, in a very small
    apartment, with the family, with the children close by, that makes focusing
    difficult, with the possibility of being efficient for work being no less
    difficult. It’s interesting that a mere 26% of the women responded that
    teleworking was something positive.


    In the rural areas but also in other underprivileged
    regions, the lockdown did not bring teleworking with it, yet it brought
    increased economic insecurity instead, as well as psychological uncertainty.
    FILIA Center is an organization focusing on the protection of women’s rights. FILIA
    has monitored the situation of women at the time of the pandemic.

    FILIA’s general manager, Andreea Rusu:


    As regards women, with whom we work
    in rural areas, they had no choice other than returning to the job they had
    abroad, or they had no more opportunities to be daily wage earners. They had to
    stay at home with their children, who could not go to school any more. .Also,
    their partners or husbands could not go to work either as, and we know that all
    too well, many people in the rural regions do not work on a labor contract or
    work on a fixed-term contract. (…) So the possibility for them to buy hygiene
    or food products, that was much more complicated than before. At national level,
    there are surveys revealing that when we had the state of emergency, two thirds
    of those who asked for unemployment benefits were women. Which points to the
    fact that, whenever a sanitary crisis occurs, it is also an economic or social
    crisis, with the women being the first to suffer because of that. (…) If
    children no longer go to school or if they have relatives who fall ill, women
    are the ones who tend to those people, so they no longer have time to function
    on the labor market and also look after their families. Which means that the
    condition of women has become even more precarious, money-wise, making them
    even more dependent on their partners.


    Actually, there are cases when even the relationship
    women had with their husbands or their partners has been severely put to the
    test, in the last year.

    Adrian Negrescu:


    64% of the women responded that
    staying at home enabled them to get to know their partners better. Why? Before
    the pandemic-generated crisis, we know all too well that men but also women
    were busy with their jobs, from morning till evening. They usually met up in
    the evening and at weekends. Their interaction was somewhat limited, whereas
    working and living in the same environment round the clock, they got to notice
    things they had not been that keen on, before, which influenced the way the
    partners perceived each other. It was something that united some of them, while
    for other people, things went completely wrong (…) It is the reason why we had
    so many divorces in 2020, while in 2021, such a trend is ongoing. Romanians
    file for divorce much more than before the pandemic, against the backdrop of
    the crisis-caused problems, against the backdrop of disputes and differences of
    perception between men and women.


    The pandemic also took its toll on the relationship
    mothers had with their children, given that official education was to a great
    extent performed from home, a home that all of a sudden became school, office,
    and home. Nevertheless, in spite of all hardships, for some of the women,
    having the chance to get closer to their little children was beneficial.

    Adrian
    Negrescu:




    Women who were already
    mothers got closer to the world of children even more. Children worked online,
    and dis their school duties from home. Parents and children spent more time together
    than before the pandemic. As for some of the mothers, they practically
    discovered their children, they discovered things about their children that
    they hadn’t noticed before, otherwise, they had very little on their hands for
    that (…) In another move, we discovered that 54%of the childless women who participated in
    our survey say they would like to get pregnant even under the difficult
    pandemic-generated conditions. Which leads us into thinking that women
    discovered their wish to become mothers to a greater extent.


    In another development, the research carried by the
    FILIA center has revealed the fact that extra help wouldn’t have done any harm to
    anyone.

    Andreea Rusu:


    Women who found it hard to work from home,
    near their children, had to be offered an alternative. An alternative should
    have existed for them. There were various forms of aid offered by the
    authorities (such as the possibility to be put on furlough), but that was not
    enough. A great many women who responded to our survey mentioned the fact that
    they had no choice other than working at night or that they opted for a sick
    leave since they couldn’t cope with their home duties. For this reason, stress
    has increased for women during the pandemic and the workload became greater,
    while for a great many of them it was very hard to strike a balance between the
    private and the professional life.


    Healthcare was another reason for concern, while the
    access to healthcare services was also made difficult, since the COVID-19 cases
    were the top priority. Every cloud has a silver lining, so the pandemic
    highlighted the importance of prevention, something which has been neglected by
    most Romanians, women and men.

    Adrian Negrescu:


    Women have become increasingly careful
    about their health. Which is a good thing. Interesting to note is the fact that
    before the pandemic, 61% of them responded they went to the doctor’s when they
    had to, 21% responded they went to the doctor’s only once a year, while a mere
    11% had their quarterly medical check-ups. Now, in 2021, the well-being has
    become a top priority. 83% of the respondents believe that is.. the main priority in 2021. Against the
    backdrop of the pandemic, women were more interested in going to the doctor’s
    to check if the problems they may have are different from the problems they
    knew about already.


    We have so far presented a string of problems related
    to the COVID-19 pandemic. It’s sad to admit that the reported domestic violence
    across the EU has also been on the rise, especially during lockdown.






  • May 7, 2020

    May 7, 2020

    COVID-19 Another 12 people died in Romania from the novel coronavirus, taking the death toll to 876, the Strategic Communication Group announced on Thursday. One of the victims is a Bulgarian truck driver, the first foreign citizen to die from COVID-19 in Romania. The total number of confirmed cases is drawing close to 14,500, of whom over 6,100 have recovered. Another 2,419 Romanian citizens living abroad have tested positive for the virus, most of them in Italy and Spain. Since the start of the pandemic, 96 Romanians living abroad have died, many of them in the UK. Meanwhile, the Romanian interior minister Marcel Vela announced, in a video posted on social media, that after May 15, when the state of emergency ends, people will be allowed to travel outside their home locality or county. Prosecutor General Gabriela Scutea said the Romanian justice system will be facing a huge wave of complaints filed by the people who received fines for breaching the military orders issued in the context of the pandemic. On Wednesday the Constitutional Court ruled that the fines were unconstitutional. As many as 300,000 people received fines totalling around 120 million euros.




    PANDEMIC We are running the risk of returning to lockdowns if restrictions are lifted too soon, warned the head of the World Health Organisation, Tedros Ghebreyesus, insisting that the lifting should be gradual, special attention should be paid to serious cases and that the healthcare system must be prepared. At present the total number of COVID-19 cases worldwide is nearing 3.8 million, with the death toll exceeding 265,000, and with 1.3 million patients having recovered, according to Worldometer. The worst hit country in the world is the USA, where over 2,000 deaths were once again reported in 24 hours, taking the total number of deaths to 75,000. The US president Donald Trump said the coronavirus has been a worse attack on the US than Pearl Harbour and 9/11. In Europe, the UK reports over 30,000 deaths and is the worst hit country on the continent, followed by Italy, Spain and France. Spains parliament extended the state of emergency by another 2 weeks, starting on Sunday.




    AID Today, a convoy of 20 trucks full of medical equipment as part of aid provided by Romania to the neighbouring Republic of Moldova, to help it fight the Covid-19 epidemic, is reaching its destination. The convoy is accompanied by an official delegation including the health minister Nelu Tătaru, the head of the Emergency Situations Department Raed Arafat, and the secretary of state on relations with the Republic of Moldova Ana Guţu. Last week, the government in Bucharest decided to grant Moldova humanitarian aid worth 16.5 million lei in the form of medical equipment and medicines. Romania has also sent a team of 52 doctors and nurses who will be working in hospitals in Moldova treating patients infected with the novel coronavirus.




    EU – Western Balkans The EU is experiencing a crisis, but it will not forsake its strategic goals and its closest partners, said the president of Romania Klaus Iohannis attending a video conference of EU and Western Balkans leaders. According to the Presidency, Iohannis welcomed the strategic decisions taken by the EU in March 2020 with respect to furthering the enlargement process, by initiating accession negotiations with Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The Romanian official also pleaded for a strengthened partnership with the Western Balkans, as the best response to the ongoing crisis, and as a means of consolidating fundamental values and democratic principles. Participants in the summit adopted the Zagreb Declaration, concerning, among others, an economic aid package granted by the EU to support Western Balkans states in fighting the COVID-19 epidemic and in post-crisis recovery. This includes immediate aid in the healthcare sector, particularly through delivering medical equipment, as well as a 750 million euro package of Macro-Financial Assistance and a 1.7 billion euro package of assistance from the European Investment Bank.




    SPORTS Romanian football celebrates today 34 years since the Bucharest club Steaua won the European Cup final. On May 7, 1986, in Seville, Spain, the team comprising Romanian footballers exclusively defeated the famous FC Barcelona in the final, in a penalty shoot-out. Steauas goalkeeper, Helmuth Duckadam, saved all the 4 spot-kicks by the Spanish opponents. In February 1987, in Monte Carlo, Steaua also won the European Super Cup, outplaying the Soviet side Dinamo Kyiv 1-0. Two of the participants in this unique performance in Romanian football, midfielder Lucian Bălan and defender Ilie Bărbulescu, died in recent years.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • November 4, 2017

    November 4, 2017

    UNIONS – The “Solidaritatea Sanitara union federation announces its opposition to the Governments plan to transfer the payment of social security contributions from employers to employees, and says it will join the all-out strike planned by the countrys main union confederations. Previously, trade union federations Frăţia, Cartel Alfa and National Union Bloc had voiced fears that this transfer would entail a drop in salaries and the loss of jobs. In turn, employer associations say that should this measure be implemented, they will have to lay off employees, while the National Liberal Party in opposition announced it would notify the Constitutional Court unless the Government gave up these plans. President Klaus Iohannis described the Governments initiative as fiscal confusion through which average gross salaries would only go up by a rough 70 eurocents. In response, PM Mihai Tudose and his Social Democratic Party chief, Liviu Dragnea, say they do not understand the opposition to the measures announced for next year, given that in fact both employers and employees would stand to gain. The Cabinet postponed to Monday the meeting in which the new provisions were to be discussed, on grounds that some of the bills on the agenda had not received all the required approvals.




    BY-ELECTIONS – The town of Deva, in western Romania, as well as 16 villages in 12 counties are preparing for Sundays by-elections. 16 localities will elect their mayors tomorrow, and a village will elect its local council. In Deva, the mayor position has been vacant since the former mayor, Mircia Muntean, re-elected to office last summer, was sentenced to six months in prison for abuse of office and DUI.




    HEALTHCARE – The Romanian healthcare and tourism ministries will work together to come up with medical tourism packages. The announcement was made by the Healthcare Minister Florian Bodog at a medical tourism conference in Bucharest. The healthcare services in the highest demand from foreign patients in Romania are dental treatments, spa treatments, and plastic surgery, Bodog explained. He added that the Government is working to adopt the public-private partnership bill, which will allow foreign partners to invest in Romania, including in the healthcare sector. The Romanian official added that he had already received offers from foreign investors interested in setting up hospitals and cardiovascular surgery and recovery centres.




    CAMPAIGN – MEP Cătălin Ivan has announced he intends to start a signature campaign to ban bearer shares in Romania. Such shares, which are not registered, may be transferred from one holder to another without tax and accounting records. Ivan argues that this enables civil servants to own stock in companies that are awarded public procurement or service contracts, without any means of combating corruption. According to official data there are around 400 companies in Romania having issued bearer shares, and most of their have been awarded government contracts worth hundreds of millions of euros. Bearer shares have already been banned in countries like the UK, Belgium, Portugal, the Czech Republic, Malta and Cyprus.




    PUIGDEMONT – Belgian authorities announced having received the international arrest warrant issued by Spain against the ousted Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont and 4 members of his secessionist cabinet. The source added that prosecutors would study the documents before submitting them to a judge. The five Catalan ministers arrived in Brussels this week, after Spain issued an arrest warrant for sedition. Puigdemont insists that he is not in Belgium to escape justice, and that he is facing a potential 30-year prison sentence for keeping his promise to his voters. A Spanish court approved the arrest after the five failed to appear in court on Thursday to respond to accusations regarding the Catalan independence declaration. Before the arrest warrants were issued, the European Commission said the trial of the Catalan separatists was for the judiciary to settle.





    HANDBALL – The Romanian womens handball team CSM Bucharest is playing this afternoon at home against the Danish side Nykobing, in the 4th round of Champions League Group A. Two weeks ago, CSM lost surprisingly in Denmark, 22-25. In the first 2 games in Group A, the Romanians defeated Krim Ljubljana of Slovenia and Vistal Gdynia of Poland. The top 2 teams in each of the 4 groups will qualify into the main group stage. Romanias target in the current competition season is to reach the Champions League Final Four. Also today, in mens handball, Romanias champions Dinamo Bucharest play away from home against Ademar Leon of Spain. Dinamo ranks last in Group C, and is left with next to no chances to move on in the competition.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • Protestations dans la Santé publique roumaine

    Protestations dans la Santé publique roumaine

    Sous-financé de manière chronique, le système médical roumain est tiraillé entre plusieurs problèmes pressants. Les patients doivent quotidiennement trouver leur chemin dans un véritable labyrinthe bureaucratique et acheter eux-mêmes les médicaments nécessaires, y compris durant un séjour à l’hôpital. Pour cela, ils ne seront pas remboursés par les assurances publiques, même s’ils en sont des contributeurs nets. Les autorités, elles, tentent de tirer sur le budget disponible afin de couvrir tant bien que mal les trous. C’est toutefois le personnel médical qui doit composer le plus et quotidiennement avec les manques et les difficultés.



    Arrivés au bout du rouleau, une partie des syndicalistes du secteur ont affiché lundi les banderoles de la grève à la japonaise. Il s’agit des membres de la Fédération des syndicats des médecins de Roumanie et de la Fédération syndicale Hippocrate de Roumanie, représentant au total plus de 7 mille employés de la Santé. Ils exigent que leurs revenus soit rapportés au salaire unitaire pour la fonction publique, qu’il leur soit octroyé les bonus et ses primes impayés ou encore qu’il leur soit respecté les horaires de travail et de repos.



    La vice-présidente de la Société nationale de la médecine traitante, Sandra Alexiu, explique: Notre exigence la plus importante concerne le financement conséquent des médecins de famille. La Banque mondiale recommande un minimum de 9% du budget de la santé, tandis que nous touchons seulement 5,8%. Ensuite, nous réclamons l’amélioration du système informatique intégré, qui fonctionne mal, tombe souvent en panne et met à mal notre travail avec les patients.



    La grève à la japonaise de lundi est la première action d’une série de protestations annoncées par les syndicalistes. Le président de la Fédération Hippocrate, Ion Cotojman, annonce le calendrier de ce mouvement: Le 28 mars, nous allons présenter nos revendications à la Commission pour la santé de la Chambre des députés. Ensuite, le 31 mars, nous allons installer des piquets de grève au ministère de l’Emploi. Le 7 avril, Journée mondiale de la Santé, nous allons faire de même au ministère de la Santé. Si les solutions concrètes tardent, le 11 avril, nous entamerons une grève d’avertissement avec une cessation d’activité de deux heures par jour. En cas de nouvel échec, le 18 avril, les médecins et tout le personnel de la Santé publique seront prêts à suspendre leur activité pour une durée indéterminée.



    En réaction, le ministre de la Santé, Patriciu Achimaş Cadariu, a affirmé qu’il appuyait une autre hausse des salaires de 25%, dans ce secteur, dès 2016, après les majorations intervenues l’année dernière. Il a précisé qu’il allait œuvrer pour débloquer les embauches dans la Santé publique, suspendues depuis plusieurs années. (trad.: Andrei Popov)