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HEALTH

Record waiting periods hit Spanish patients

Spanish hospitals are making patients wait longer than ever for operations, new government stats show.

Record waiting periods hit Spanish patients
A record 571,395 people in Spain were put on a waiting list for an operation in 2012. Photo: PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP

A record 571,395 people in Spain were put on a waiting list for an operation in 2012 – the highest ever figure since the Spanish Health System started collecting data in 2004.

The average waiting period also rose from 76 to 100 days from June to December 2012, representing a 6.4 percent rise.

Spanish law states that certain medical interventions cannot be held off for a period longer than six months.

This applies to cataract operations but 16.5 percent of patients waited for a period longer than 180 days.

It was also the case for hip replacements, where 26.88 percent of those requiring the intervention had to wait for more than half a year .

“Even though spending cuts have led to great savings in aspects such as pharmaceutical costs, they have also resulted in huge reductions in the number of medical personnel available,” Tomás Toranzo, vice president of medical union CESM, told Spanish daily El País.

“This is having a severe effect on our medical system.”

Since 2010, Spain’s health budget has been drastically reduced by €6.9 billion.

Hundreds of doctors in regions like Madrid, Castile-La Mancha and Valencia have been forced to retire at 65, with no replacements being provided to the health centres where they once worked.

Other reasons why waiting periods have grown so radically include the closure of health centres across Spain as well as reduced opening hours.

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HEALTH

Lengthy waiting times at Danish hospitals not going away yet: minister

Danish Minister for the Interior and Health Sophie Løhde has warned that, despite increasing activity at hospitals, it will be some time before current waiting lists are reduced.

Lengthy waiting times at Danish hospitals not going away yet: minister

The message comes as Løhde was set to meet with officials from regional health authorities on Wednesday to discuss the progress of an acute plan for the Danish health system, launched at the end of last year in an effort to reduce a backlog of waiting times which built up during the coronavirus crisis.

An agreement with regional health authorities on an “acute” spending plan to address the most serious challenges faced by the health services agreed in February, providing 2 billion kroner by the end of 2024.

READ ALSO: What exactly is wrong with the Danish health system?

The national organisation for the health authorities, Danske Regioner, said to newspaper Jyllands-Posten earlier this week that progress on clearing the waiting lists was ahead of schedule.

Some 245,300 operations were completed in the first quarter of this year, 10 percent more than in the same period in 2022 and over the agreed number.

Løhde said that the figures show measures from the acute plan are “beginning to work”.

“It’s positive but even though it suggests that the trend is going the right way, we’re far from our goal and it’s important to keep it up so that we get there,” she said.

“I certainly won’t be satisfied until waiting times are brought down,” she said.

“As long as we are in the process of doing postponed operations, we will unfortunately continue to see a further increase [in waiting times],” Løhde said.

“That’s why it’s crucial that we retain a high activity this year and in 2024,” she added.

Although the government set aside 2 billion kroner in total for the plan, the regional authorities expect the portion of that to be spent in 2023 to run out by the end of the summer. They have therefore asked for some of the 2024 spending to be brought forward.

Løhde is so far reluctant to meet that request according to Jyllands-Posten.

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