Tag: RRP

  • EU funding for hospitals

    EU funding for hospitals

    The Romanian defence minister, Angel
    Tîlvăr, and health minister, Alexandru Rafila, have signed a number of
    financing contracts for healthcare infrastructure investment projects under the
    National Recovery and Resilience Plan (RRP).


    The funds will be channeled into military
    hospitals around the country, as well as other hospitals in Bucharest and Constanţa
    (south-east). The emergency military hospitals in Sibiu (centre), Piteşti (south),
    Craiova (south-west) and Braşov (centre) will receive money for revamping and
    for building new wards.


    The defence minister says patients’
    confidence in military hospitals is quite high and emphasized that substantial
    funding will be used for such hospitals.


    Angel Tîlvăr: The documents I am honoured to sign today
    together with Mr. Rafila, the health minister, allow the financing of new
    buildings for 4 military hospitals in the country, which will receive around
    EUR 81 mln under Component 12, Healthcare, of the RRP.


    Also under the RRP, in Bucharest a new TB
    diagnosis and treatment centre will be built, using some EUR 26 mln. The
    manager of the Pneumophtysiology Institute, Beatrice Mahler, explains that this
    investment will benefit both patients, and the specialists in the field:


    Beatrice Mahler: This investment
    has been long awaited by Romanian TB patients, who fortunately, thanks to this
    kind of investments, will no longer feel stigmatised, but also by the
    healthcare staff, because we want not only patients to be safe, but the
    personnel as well.


    In turn, the health minister
    pointed out that funding will be earmarked next for the revamping of family
    physician practices:


    Alexandru Rafila: We will soon
    finalise all the investment contracts, both for hospital healthcare and for
    outpatient facilities, including family physician practices, for which the
    final stage will be soon reached, allowing for their financing, revamping and
    equipment procurement.


    The newly signed contracts also cover
    the building of a new mother and child health facility as part of the Constanţa
    Emergency Hospital, and the extension of the Municipal Polyclinic there.


    The National Recovery and Resilience Plan is designed to ensure the development of Romania, by increasing its
    resilience in crisis situations after the COVID-19 pandemic, and by
    capitalising on the country’s economic growth potential, through major reforms
    and key investments. In order to receive funding,
    Member States submit their national plans to the European Commission, and
    receive money in instalments, until August 2026, depending on their meeting specific benchmarks. Romania benefits
    from over EUR 29 bln under this facility. (AMP)