
What happens to ordinary citizens, who don't have government decisions and millions of lek at their disposal? Are their lives worth less?
I want to express my solidarity with the health situation of former Deputy Minister of Health Mira Rakacolli. Even to my worst enemy, I, as a human being, do not wish her harm, nor do I want harm. I wish that with every health situation she is facing, she will overcome it!
But I want to talk about the principle.
Why doesn't an important Albanian health official trust what he himself has created, built, and worked on?
Isn't the Oncology "with standards"? Isn't it "with international protocols"? Isn't this the hospital where the state tells us every day that patients are treated like in Europe?
So, why doesn't a senior government representative go there when she gets sick? Why doesn't she trust the doctors and oncology therapies in Albania, but chooses treatment abroad, in private clinics?
Let's remember: a few years ago, the Albanian government decided to pay Ms. Mira Rakacolli 30 million lekë for her oncological treatment abroad. So, the state itself admitted that oncology is not enough to cure a deputy minister.
What happens to ordinary citizens, who don't have government decisions and millions of lek at their disposal? Are their lives worth less?
Are the lives of hundreds of women who did not receive treatment for breast cancer at certain times worth less?
Are the lives of women who cannot undergo brachytherapy worth less?
Is the life of mother Hava, who was destined to face the wrong cancer, worth less? Because the medication she wanted was non-refundable, while for those with skin and lung cancer, it was reimbursable.
This is the bitter reality: The Oncology Department only serves for propaganda, while when those who sell it to us as a "model hospital" themselves get sick, they flee Albania.
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