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Bulgaria Health System Could Perform Much Better, World Bank Says

Bulgaria Health System Could Perform Much Better, World Bank Says Bulgaria’s health care system has the potential to considerably boost its performance while cutting out-of-pocket spending, the World Bank has said. A More »

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Health cards have become operational in Romania

Health cards have become operational in Romania Health cards have become operational in Romania but problems have not been late to appear. Hundreds of thousands of people have not yet received the More »

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Never mind diet and gym, just travel by bus

Never mind diet and gym, just travel by bus Those who get around town without cars or mopeds are healthier. This is the idea behind European research project PASTA (Physical Activity through More »

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Medtronic Activa Neurostimulators Approved in Europe for Full Body MRI Scans

Medtronic Activa Neurostimulators Approved in Europe for Full Body MRI Scans Medtronic won European regulatory approval for its Activa line of deep brain stimulators (DBS) to be safe for use in full More »

Ukrainian servicemen march away, after negotiations with Russian troops at the Belbek Sevastopol International Airport in the Crimea region

Ukrainian troops using Lithuanian healthcare – 5 more comes in few days

Ukrainian troops using Lithuanian healthcare – 5 more comes in few days Another five Ukrainian soldiers injured in the fighting in Eastern Ukraine have arrived for treatment in hospitals of Lithuania. “Five More »

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NHS bosses blasted after temporary nurse is paid £2,200 for ONE 12-hour shift to cover staffing shortage

NHS bosses blasted after temporary nurse is paid £2,200 for ONE 12-hour shift to cover staffing shortage Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals NHS Trust paid the huge figure Equates to £183 an hour More »

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Doctors at a number of hospitals in Bulgaria to stage symbolic protests

Doctors at a number of hospitals in Bulgaria to stage symbolic protests Doctors at a number of hospitals in Bulgaria will stage symbolic protests on their professional holiday, April 7 (World Health More »

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Brilliant spark for personalised therapies

Brilliant spark for personalised therapies The 2015 Spark Award goes to a group of researchers led by ETH Professor Manfred Kopf, which has developed a method by which specific characteristics of immune More »

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Cyprus: Price reductions on drugs will create a shortage in the market

Cyprus: Price reductions on drugs will create a shortage in the market Medicine importers warn that manufacturers may soon stop supplying the Cyprus market with a number of products due to successive More »

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Portugese people miss on their medical appointments: Health service suffers 2,000 ‘no shows’ every day

Portugese people miss on their medical appointments: Health service suffers 2,000 ‘no shows’ every day Every day at least 2,000 patients fail to turn up for medical appointments in Portugal’s health centres More »

Falun Gong demonstartors dramatize an il

Italy signs international anti-organ trafficking convention

Italy signs international anti-organ trafficking convention Strasbourg, March 25 – Italy on Wednesday was one of 14 nations to ratify an international convention against organ trafficking. The Council of Europe Convention against More »

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Health cards have become operational in Romania

Romanian border crossing point

Health cards have become operational in Romania

Health cards have become operational in Romania but problems have not been late to appear. Hundreds of thousands of people have not yet received the card while those who have, spend a lot of time in the family doctor’s practices for the cards to be active
Meant to streamline the medical assistance process in Romania, the health cards system, implemented as of May 1st, has for the moment simply turned things upside down. The technology behind the system seems to have failed its mission and consultations are prolonged due to the problems encountered by doctors upon activating the card.

The vice-president of the National Family Medicine Society, Sandra Alexiu, explains the situation: “For the patients who did not have the cards activated, the activation process has been extremely difficult, and in most cases it has failed. While those who had already had their cards activated had to spend a lot of time in the doctor’s practice due to system errors. So a 15-minute consultation was extended up to an hour.” The president of the National Health Insurance House, Vasile Ciurchea, says that using the health card does not block the IT system but simply delays the system response. He estimates problems will be solved in 2 weeks at the most. Vasile Ciurchea: “We will use the cards at all costs. As long as we provide services, the card needs to be used. The system has a delayed response, I understand that everybody is angry with the situation, but providers need to understand that their services will be eventually reimbursed.” Medical services are also provided to those who do not have a health card yet, Vasile Ciurchea added.

The National Health Insurance House president called on the medical service providers and patients alike to try to understand the importance of implementing that system. Vasile Ciurchea: “If you have a card, you use it. If you don’t have a card, for no matter what reason, and you need a medical service, you will receive it, and this service will be subsequently reimbursed to providers. Children do not need a card. And in pharmacies one can also use the card or the data in one’s ID card.” Vasile Ciurchea added that those who do not observe the legal provisions related to health cards risked sanctions, such as warnings and even the termination of the contract with the National Health Insurance House

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Never mind diet and gym, just travel by bus

busstop

Never mind diet and gym, just travel by bus

Those who get around town without cars or mopeds are healthier. This is the idea behind European research project PASTA (Physical Activity through Sustainable Transport Approaches), which takes an original approach to assessing the benefits of various transport choices. It stresses that the use of bikes, metro and buses incorporate exercise while keeping pollution levels lower and also expose people less to traffic accidents. In short, they keep you in better shape.

Seven cities were surveyed for the project: Antwerp, Barcelona, London, Örebro, Rome, Vienna and Zurich. Each city identified a sample of 2,000 people willing to change and monitor their lifestyle with a regular and simple online test. Scientific support for the EU project was also provided by astudy from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, which found that the choice of public transport affects people’s physical health and weight much more than punishing diets or exhausting sessions in the gym. Women and men who walk, cycle or get the bus, tram or sub-way to work weigh about 3kg less than those who travel by car.

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Medtronic Activa Neurostimulators Approved in Europe for Full Body MRI Scans

Activa-PC

Medtronic Activa Neurostimulators Approved in Europe for Full Body MRI Scans

Medtronic won European regulatory approval for its Activa line of deep brain stimulators (DBS) to be safe for use in full body MRI scans, given certain conditions. Previously, the company had approval for only head scans under MRI for patients wearing their DBS devices. The new announcement allows both future as well as existing patients to receive MRI scans of any part of the body, as long as specific precautions are taken by the radiology techs.

These are the only DBS systems to receive a full-body MR-conditional approval from the European authorities, allowing patients with Parkinson’s disease, essential tremor, refractory epilepsy, and dystonia to continue receiving medical care that requires MR scans. The implants have to be appropriately programmed before undergoing a scan, keeping them working so as to allow the acquisition of sharp images unaffected by the jerky motions associated with neuromotor disease

source: http://www.medgadget.com/2015/04/medtronic-activa-neurostimulators-approved-in-europe-for-full-body-mri-scans.html

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Ukrainian troops using Lithuanian healthcare – 5 more comes in few days

Ukrainian servicemen march away, after negotiations with Russian troops at the Belbek Sevastopol International Airport in the Crimea region

Ukrainian troops using Lithuanian healthcare – 5 more comes in few days

Another five Ukrainian soldiers injured in the fighting in Eastern Ukraine have arrived for treatment in hospitals of Lithuania.

“Five participants of the anti-terrorist operation in Ukraine arrived in Lithuania for treatment on April 8,” Asta Galdikaitė, adviser at the Defence Ministry’s Public Relations Division, told BNS.

In her words, three of the five soldiers were brought by the Defence Ministry and they will be treated at a rehabilitation centre in the resort city of Druskininkai, while the other two Ukrainian men brought by the Health Ministry will undergo treatment in Druskininkai hospital.

Lithuania expects to receive and rehabilitate 50 soldiers from Eastern Ukraine. Seven Ukrainians were treated in Lithuania in January, in addition to three in February and four in March.

The war between Russian-supported separatists and Ukraine’s governmental forces is in progress since last April. According to data available to the United Nations, the conflict has already claimed more than 6,000 lives.

http://en.delfi.lt/lithuania/foreign-affairs/5-more-ukrainian-troops-come-to-lithuanian-hospitals.d?id=67660116#ixzz3X6qv83sO

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NHS bosses blasted after temporary nurse is paid £2,200 for ONE 12-hour shift to cover staffing shortage

NHS par sign

NHS bosses blasted after temporary nurse is paid £2,200 for ONE 12-hour shift to cover staffing shortage

  • Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals NHS Trust paid the huge figure
  • Equates to £183 an hour and is double to going rate for a neurologist
  • Hospital said temporary staff have to be used to cover staffing shortfalls 

NHS bosses have today come under fire after it emerged a hospital paid a temporary nurse £2,200 to cover a single 12-hour shift. The figure, which equates to £183 an hour, was paid by the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust.

It represents double the rate for a neurologist and was revealed following a Freedom of Information request. It also emerged there were 47 agency nurses working at the trust in December last year.  The trust, which runs the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital and the Princess Royal Hospital in Telford, has been criticised for wasting taxpayers’ money.

Jonathan Isaby, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: ‘Taxpayers will be aghast at the cost of just one shift.   ‘Agency nurses are far more expensive than their regular counterparts and we have to minimise the number used. ‘You can’t open a newspaper without hearing how tight finances are in the NHS, but the service has to become far more efficient with the money it already has.

Edmund Stubbs, from independent think tank Civitas, added: ‘It is evident that a lack of staff is leading to excessive spending on agency staff, locums and overseas recruitment.’ A spokesman for the trust said the £2,200 figure includes VAT, adding that the true figure paid to the nurse, including travel expenses, was £1,864. The shift covered was one in specialist Intensive Therapy Unit on a Bank Holiday. Defending their spending, Sarah Bloomfield, director of nursing at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust, said temporary staff had to be used to cover a shortfall in trained nurses. She highlighted their situation is one shared by many hospitals across the UK.  She added: ‘We have said consistently that we want to recruit more nurses to reduce our reliance on agency and temporary staff and this has been widely publicised with a number of recruitment events taking place recently to attract new staff. ‘We have recruited, or made offers to, more than 150 staff nurses and health care assistants in recent months as part of our efforts to recruit more nursing staff to support our wards and departments.

Read the whole story here:

 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3030345/NHS-bosses-blasted-temporary-nurse-paid-2-200-ONE-12-hour-shift-cover-staffing-shortage.html

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Doctors at a number of hospitals in Bulgaria to stage symbolic protests

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Doctors at a number of hospitals in Bulgaria to stage symbolic protests

Doctors at a number of hospitals in Bulgaria will stage symbolic protests on their professional holiday, April 7 (World Health Day), over the new methodology of distribution of financing.

They have called on all of their colleagues to support the protest and express their discontent with the new methodology of distribution of financial resources among hospitals, stressing that, on the one hand, it reduces the amount of funding from last year’s, and, on the other hand, fixes he rate, according to Darik radio.

Medical care workers who plan to take part in the protest insist that these rules will lead to bankruptcies of a number of hospitals.

They claim that the methodology has been reversed, with the patient being forced to follow the money, instead of the money following the patient.

Doctors say that some hospitals have had their budget slashed by over 20% compared to last year’s.

Read more here: http://www.novinite.com/articles/167759/Doctors+in+Bulgaria+to+Stage+Symbolic+Protest+over+New+Funding+Model

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Brilliant spark for personalised therapies

stemcell-research_1532389c

Brilliant spark for personalised therapies

The 2015 Spark Award goes to a group of researchers led by ETH Professor Manfred Kopf, which has developed a method by which specific characteristics of immune cells can be identified. The technology could prove to be an important tool in personalised medicine.

A total of 145 inventions, 82 of which have been registered for patent approval: ETH Zurich researchers developed many brilliant ideas for new technologies in 2014. Every year, ETH nominates the technologies with the greatest commercial potential for the Spark Award. External judges and specialists from ETH transfer, ETH Zurich’s technology transfer unit, evaluate the inventions. Apart from the commercial potential also originality and  patent strength are taken into account..

“Have you ever wondered what a spark is?” asked Detlef Günther, Vice President Research and Corporate Relations of ETH Zürich in his welcome speech at this year’s Spark Award ceremony. A spark is something that is really highly energetic, explained Günther, a charged particle that emits light. And that energy transfer typically starts from one single particle or from a group, and typically the strongest one. “Today we hope to find the most innovative particle or group of particles with the most innovative idea in this room.”

This year, ETH Professor Manfred Kopf and his colleagues Jan Kisielow and Franz-Josef Obermair receive the Spark Award for a new technology that allows large scale and simple characterisation of specific immune cells, called T-cells. “We hope our technology will be an important tool in many clinical areas, be it diagnostics or individualised therapies,” says Kisielow, a research associate at the Institute for Molecular Health Sciences.

Target search in high-throughput

T-cells carry specific receptors that recognise virus-infected or degenerate cells in the body so that they can render them harmless. When T-cells mature, countless variants with different receptors develop that recognise each other’s target structures (antigens). A complex immune selection process eliminates those T-cells that recognise the body’s healthy cells. Remaining is a battalion of T-cells with different receptors that match all kinds of extraneous and abnormal antigens. In autoimmune diseases, such as polyarthritis or multiple sclerosis, T-cells develop with receptors that incorrectly identify and attack healthy cells in the body.


Jan Kisielow explains in a video how their technology allows to characterise specific characterstics of T cells.

The technology developed by Kopf, Kisielow and Obermair is a high-throughput method by which the antigens recognised by T-cells can be identified. A cell equipped with a light signal presents an antigen from a library of candidate molecules on its surface. If a T-cell with its receptor now binds to the presented molecule, the light signal is switched on and contact between the T-cell and the antigen is immediately reported. Through the light signal, the antigen can be picked out from the library and identified.

This invention could enable the development of customised therapies for patients. For example, if one knows the target peptide of the stray T-cells in an autoimmune disease, it may be possible to mask it in order to protect the healthy cells. It is also conceivable that the degenerate T-cells in the patient’s blood could be used as an indicator in the diagnosis of autoimmune diseases. In addition, T-cells found in close proximity to a tumour could provide insight into new tumour antigens, which may allow customised cancer immunotherapy.

For further dialogues with the scientists read more at: https://www.ethz.ch/en/news-and-events/eth-news/news/2015/04/brilliant-spark-for-personalised-therapies.html

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Cyprus: Price reductions on drugs will create a shortage in the market

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Cyprus: Price reductions on drugs will create a shortage in the market

Medicine importers warn that manufacturers may soon stop supplying the Cyprus market with a number of products due to successive price reductions imposed by the government.
The Cyprus Pharmaceutical Association (CPA) says manufacturers abroad are already mulling pulling out because an anticipated further fall in meds prices will make them unprofitable.
“This is not an idle threat or a bluff on our part,” CPA head Avgoustinos Potamitis told the Cyprus Mail.

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So far, he said, stocks have run out on about only three to four brand products, but the situation could fast worsen should the government press ahead with a second price cut.
Back in January, the health ministry slashed the price of almost 2,000 medicines by around 15.5 per cent on average, but in some cases the reductions were as high as 80 per cent.

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Portugese people miss on their medical appointments: Health service suffers 2,000 ‘no shows’ every day

Portugal-map

Portugese people miss on their medical appointments: Health service suffers 2,000 ‘no shows’ every day

Every day at least 2,000 patients fail to turn up for medical appointments in Portugal’s health centres and surgeries – and doctors point the finger at increased charges and patients’ financial difficulties.

Data from the health service’s central administration shows that in January this year there was a total of 60,383 consultations, of which 5.6% were ‘no shows’.

Since April 2013, hospitals are entitled to charge for ‘no shows’, if they are not properly justified, though many of them do not take the new option up.

Doctors blame the crisis as the principal cause of patient ‘no shows’, namely because people cannot afford public transport and health service charges.

source: http://portugalresident.com/health-service-suffers-2000-%E2%80%98no-shows%E2%80%99-every-day

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Italy signs international anti-organ trafficking convention

Falun Gong demonstartors dramatize an il

Italy signs international anti-organ trafficking convention

Strasbourg, March 25 – Italy on Wednesday was one of 14 nations to ratify an international convention against organ trafficking.

The Council of Europe Convention against Trafficking in Human Organs – the first ever international treaty to combat this crime – was opened for signature at an international conference organised by the Council of Europe and the Spanish government in Santiago de Compostela, Spain.Trafficking in human organs is a serious threat to public health and is often linked to transnational organised crime, according to the Council of Europe. The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that some 10,000 black market transplants are carried out every year.

human-organ-for-transplant

The other signatories so far are Albania, Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Greece, Luxembourg, Moldavia, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Turkey, and the UK.”This is the first binding treaty criminalizing all activities linked to the illegal trade in human organs,” said Council of Europe Secretary General Thorbjorn Jagland. Among other things, the convention punishes the trafficking and trade in organs as well as anyone who publicizes organs for sale and hospital staffers who look the other way when examining patients with organ transplants of dubious provenance.

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