Constitution Hinders Treatment Abroad?

Belgrade - State will not send children abroad for medical treatment and will be able to amend the Regulation on treatment abroad if the Legislation is changed.

Izvor: B92

Thursday, 15.08.2013.

09:05

Default images

Belgrade - State will not send children abroad for medical treatment and will be able to amend the Regulation on treatment abroad if the Legislation is changed. The state will not send children abroad for medical treatment and will be able to amend the Regulation on treatment abroad, apparently, until the changes to the legislation and the Constitution have been made. Constitution Hinders Treatment Abroad? Although it was expected that the Regulations would be modified soon, after the RFZO roundtable, there is no indication for that. The Health Minister Slavica Djukic Dejanovic said on the roundtable that soon experts from Vienna and Berlin in Serbia would be examining the health of most vulnerable children, after which it will be decided on the method and place of treatment, but it is currently not possible to change rules on the treatment abroad and on the Serbian state expense. "Parliament can change the law then we can change the Regulation. The Act on Discrimination defends grouping by medical diagnosis," said Dejanovic on the RFZO roundtable. The Health Minister said earlier for B92 that "the solutions of disposable use are not good" and that in the resolution of this must take into account all the "ethical, professional and formally-legal issues." Legal restrictions and obstacles to amend the Regulation introducing indications of "heart transplanting insured persons under 18 years of age" were released yesterday at a round table, after which no conclusions about sending sick children to transplantation were reached. flickr/USAG Vicenza B92

Constitution Hinders Treatment Abroad?

Although it was expected that the Regulations would be modified soon, after the RFZO roundtable, there is no indication for that.

The Health Minister Slavica Djukic Dejanovic said on the roundtable that soon experts from Vienna and Berlin in Serbia would be examining the health of most vulnerable children, after which it will be decided on the method and place of treatment, but it is currently not possible to change rules on the treatment abroad and on the Serbian state expense.

"Parliament can change the law then we can change the Regulation. The Act on Discrimination defends grouping by medical diagnosis," said Dejanovic on the RFZO roundtable.

The Health Minister said earlier for B92 that "the solutions of disposable use are not good" and that in the resolution of this must take into account all the "ethical, professional and formally-legal issues."

Legal restrictions and obstacles to amend the Regulation introducing indications of "heart transplanting insured persons under 18 years of age" were released yesterday at a round table, after which no conclusions about sending sick children to transplantation were reached.

Komentari 0

0 Komentari

Možda vas zanima

Podeli: