PM Samaras on health reform: ‘Greece must stop wasting funds’

“Greece must stop wasting funds and the country must stop being paralysed by deficits,” Samaras said, noting that “we had the highest expenditures in the health sector, while citizens were constantly being asked to pay out of pocket more and more. We have the highest number of private doctors’ offices and yet everyone went to hospitals (for care). We have a lot

of doctors, but citizens had to wait for months to get an appointment with a doctor. We have more MRIs done than the United States.”

“It was a distorted system which needed a sweeping reform,” the premier said, which “we are determined to carry through.”

The reform “should have occurred years ago,” Samaras noted. “It is not happening now because the troika (of lenders) has asked for it. We had to do it (anyway). Speaking of the National Health System (ESY), the premier said that “this giant with feet of clay must at last stand on its own two feet. There will be decentralisation, with every Greek having his or her doctor, as close to their home as possible…In all things we can disagree but in health, there is no room for disagreement among parties or for communication ploys.”

Earlier in the day, the government’s Administrative Reform Council approved a report restructuring the health sector, changing the role of the National Organisation for the Provision of Healthcare Services (EOPYY) and introducing round-the-clock health service.

The basic restructuring will turn EOPYY into an agency procuring health services, turning all health service provision over to ESY, the National Health System. EOPYY will then operate under a central authority and as a single funding source that may have branches in seven regions to be determined. As such, it will be responsible for demanding and acquiring the most advantageous contracts, the report said.

The changes will allow for improved primary health services to the public that will be available 24 hours each day, throughout the week, not from Monday to Friday and on a limited schedule, as they are today.

Although details were not provided, the proposal said that the changes would do away with double services and superfluous units that operate while shortages are creating problems of available service, such as the institution of the family doctor, which it hopes to reintroduce.

The report also included suggestions that doctors become full-time work at primary health service centre, but no specific provisions were included about their transfer from EOPYY to ESY.

Source: AMNA

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