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‘Speeding’ emergency doctor can drive again

After outpourings of public support, prosecutors in Munich on Monday have lifted the fine and driving ban an on-call emergency doctor was to get for speeding on his way to an urgent situation.

'Speeding' emergency doctor can drive again
Dr. Alexander Hatz. Photo: DPA

The attorney-general in Munich had fined Dr. Alexander Hatz €4,500 and suspended his driving privileges after another motorist reported him for driving dangerously, but upon review, decided to drop the charges all together.

"We have dropped all fines and bans," a spokesman for the attorney general told The Local.

Hatz had filed an appeal in the case after he was reported for 'reckless driving' on his way to an emergency call in a town nine minutes away in April 2014.

A mother had reported her two-year-old dughter couldn't breathe. It turned out that the young patient had swallowed super glue. 

Hatz, a 23-year veteran of his profession, hurried the 11 kilometres to the woman's home, putting his car's siren on and flashing the emergency lights.

"On average, I drove 85km/h" Hatz told Bild newspaper. "The drive was like any other. I passed some cars, and I flashed others so they could let my drive by."

But someone was not happy with the doctor's actions and reported him for dangerous driving, leading to a massive fee and the suspension of his driving licence, which would have also put his job as an on-call emergency doctor in jeopardy.

"If this punishment goes forward, my professional life is at risk," he told the Augsburger Allgemeine last week.  

Hatz's case sparked widespread outrage in Germany, which led to a man nanmed Florian Jonitz setting up a petition at openpetition.de to advocate for Hatz's pardon.

"In driving school, one learns that one has to make room when a service vehicle comes along with sirens and emergency lights," Jonitz wrote.

"Support this petition so that all emergency vehicles who behave properly are not punished by someone else who has shown no consideration or has forgotten the rules."

The petition gathered more than 206,000 signatures in the four days since it was posted.

However, the attorney general spokesman said the public support had little to do Monday's decision.

"We re-examined the case and saw there was no reason for there to have been any kind of punishment for the doctor's actions," The Local was told.

"I am thrilled – this is a wonderful success," Hatz's lawyer Florian Engelt told the Augsburger Allgemeine on Monday. "From the beginning I said that the punishment stood on shaky ground and always argued as such."

His patient, the now three-year-old Magdalena, is fine, thanks to Hatz's help, her mother told Bild.

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HEALTH

Klinik-Atlas: How to use Germany’s new hospital comparison portal

The German government has launched a ‘Bundes-Klinik-Atlas’ which provides information on services and treatment quality at almost 1,700 hospitals throughout Germany. Here's what you need to know.

Klinik-Atlas: How to use Germany's new hospital comparison portal

Whether you’re a foreign resident or a local, it can be tricky to navigate hospital care in Germany. 

Now the German government has launched a new nationwide ‘Klinik-Atlas’ aimed at making it easier for people to compare different services in hospitals. 

If a patient needs care at a hospital or clinic, such as a knee operation, cancer treatment or to get their tonsils out, they can look through the state-run comparison portal to compare the services offered and their quality. The portal is intended to help patients make a decision on where they want to access care. 

It was launched on Friday May 17th and so far includes details on 1,700 hospitals throughout the country. 

Why has the Klinik-Atlas been launched? 

The German government believed there was a need to get more information on hospitals out there to the public. 

Health Minister Karl Lauterbach, of the Social Democrats (SPD), said comprehensive information on how to find good care is now more accessible to everyone with the new portal. 

He said that transparency was needed in view of the 16 million hospital treatments that take place in Germany per year and the 500,000 new cancer patients per year alone. Most patients are unsure which clinic or hospital is best suited for their treatment, he added. 

Compared to existing information portals, the Klinik-Atlas is particularly unique in the way it prepares data for patients, Lauterbach said: “With just a few clicks, they can compare clinics and find the best clinic in their area for the treatment they need.”

READ ALSO: Which of Germany’s hospitals are among the ‘world’s best’?

Patients can see and assess hospitals side by side instead of having to “hop from clinic to clinic”, added Lauterbach. He called it “clear guide” to help people sift through the maze of health care. 

However, there’s been a mixed reception to the project, with hospitals raising some concerns.

How does it work exactly?

One thing to keep in mind is that the site, which is located at www.bundes-klinik-atlas.de, is only in German, but it is fairly simple to use. 

– On the site you can see a map with all the clinics in your area, as well as the number of beds they have and treatments they offer. Each clinic is scored on the quality of its care. The score is based on the number of patients per nurse, taking into account the severity of the cases. Lower values equate better scores in this case.

A sign at a Charité Campus points to the Central Emergency Department.

A sign at the Berlin Charité points to the Central Emergency Department. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Sebastian Gollnow

– You can also enter your place of residence and an illness or a very specific treatment in the portal. The system offers search suggestions if you don’t know the specialised term. According to the ministry, 28,000 treatment and 13,000 disease definitions are stored.

– There is a kind of speedometer display to help patients categorise their cases. The ‘faster’ you go, so to speak, i.e. the further the needle moves to the right, the better. For the time being, there are two speedometers – for the number of annual cases of a treatment and for the number of nursing staff in the hospital. The speedometers have five coloured elements to which the needle can point – from ‘very few’ to ‘very many’ cases, for example. 

What else can you find out?

A comparison shows that there are “huge differences within a very small area”, said Lauterbach. For example, there are 48 hospitals in Berlin and the surrounding area that perform bowel cancer operations, but only 18 of them are certified as specialist centres.

In the case of severe bowel disease in children, there are clinics that perform more than 70 operations a year, while others only perform four.

It is not the case that large clinics are automatically always ‘the winners’. There are also small clinics that are extremely specialised.

The portal is to receive its first update in a few weeks’ time and will then include complication rates for treatments. Figures on the number of specialised doctors will follow.

The information will be updated regularly, according to the Institute for Quality and Transparency in Healthcare, which is coordinating the implementation. At the moment the data is lagging, featuring case numbers from 2022. The information comes from several sources, including clinics and health insurance company invoices.

READ ALSO: How could Germany solve its worsening GP crisis?

How’s the reaction so far? 

According to the ministry, there were more than five million hits in the first three hours of the comparison launching, with some page views also experiencing a brief hitch due to the volume of traffic. 

But not everyone is for it. The German Hospital Federation said the portal does not provide patients with any additional information and even adds more bureaucracy to hospitals’ workloads. The hospital sector recently expanded its own online overview portal. The Deutschen Krankenhaus Verzeichnis’ or ‘German Hospital Directory’, which has existed since 2002, was updated to include more search functions. 

The German Patient Protection Foundation said that people want to know about the range of services and quality. “But the ‘hospital atlas’ lacks crucial information,” said CEO Eugen Brysch. “The quality of patient management in the clinic is not recorded.”

The German Social Association welcomed the comparison site, but added: “It remains to be seen how great the added value for patients really is.”

READ ALSO: How Germany is planning to save its ailing hospitals 

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