Social security debts threaten standstill in health sector
By Penny Bouloutza
The provision of primary medical care and medicines to about 9
million people is at risk of collapse due to the accumulated debts of
the National Organization for the Provision of Health Services (EOPPY),
as the government has reneged on its promise to settle all arrears to
private suppliers of the old insurance funds that now comprise EOPPY by
the end of March, totalling 1.7 billion euros.
Pharmacists last
week decided to indefinitely suspend dispensing medicines on credit,
protesting the accumulation of debts of 540 million euros for
prescriptions up to March. The insured now have to pay themselves for
the cost of their medicines, and claim it from their social insurance
funds.
EOPPY-contracted private doctors are reported to be
planning similar action, claiming they are owed 620 million euros for
services they provided up to the end of March.
“Doctors have been
paid only in some districts for services rendered in the first two
months of 2012. Diagnostic labs fear they may have to pull their
shutters down as they have no money to pay operating costs. Of the 4,500
doctors that initially signed contracts with EOPPY, 500 have withdrawn
because they are not being paid,” EOPPY doctors’ president Giorgos
Eleftheriou said. EOPPY also owes 800 million euros to private clinics,
while the debts of its constituent parts to public hospitals until
December 31, 2011, totalled 1.8 billion euros.
Pharmacists in
Attica are to decide on their next moves on Wednesday, depending on the
progress of piecemeal payment of arrears until the elections of June 17
for medicines dispensed in March and April, as promised by the caretaker
government. |
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