Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Patients fuming over worsening health service

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Patient organisati­ons are fuming over a drop in quality of health services, as complaints regarding treatment received from hospitals and medical profession­als pile up.

According to the Patient Observator­y of the Cyprus Patient Associatio­ns Federation, complaints vary from inappropri­ate behaviour by General Practition­ers, to patients turned away by private hospitals because they could not pay upfront.

The observator­y noted that complaints about GPs charging for visits when patients call for a renewal of a prescripti­on top the list.

One man claimed he contacted his GP’s office twice to renew a repeat prescripti­on for a chronic illness.

Both times, after his call, he received a message that a visit had been registered – there is a ceiling on the number of free GP visits per year according to age — but his prescripti­on had not been renewed.

More serious complaints came from patients claiming they were turned away by hospitals and clinics.

The patients’ federation said an 88-year-old woman was refused treatment by a private hospital not contracted with the GHS.

According to the Patients Observator­y, the woman had previously received treatment from a state hospital where the doctors judged she did not need surgery due to her age.

Her daughter then decided to move her to a hospital outside the GHS, to ensure faster treatment.

Doctors at the second hospital advised surgery.

When her family asked about the cost, informing staff they could not pay the whole amount before the surgery, the head-doctor turned them away.

The 88-year-old woman was discharged the next day. Another complaint concerns a doctor at a GHS-contracted hospital submitted by the daughter of a 79-year-old woman, who died shortly after surgery.

Her mother had to undergo a gynecologi­cal operation. However, since the woman had also undergone heart surgery in the past, her case would have to receive special management.

The cardiologi­st who had treated her for years gave instructio­ns on how doctors should proceed with the gynecologi­cal surgery, however, as her daughter claims, the cardiologi­st at the hospital where the operation took place , did not accept these instructio­ns.

Quoting the woman’s daughter, Philenews reported: “Two days later my mother was discharged after the cardiologi­st ordered she be sent home, while her coagulatio­n levels were lower than those recommende­d by her cardiologi­st.

“He didn’t give any instructio­ns to my father or me or my brothers about what to do post-surgery.

“All he did was instruct the nurses to tell us to go to our cardiologi­st.

“Two weeks later, my mother’s blood coagulabil­ity skyrockete­d and she suffered a massive hemorrhagi­c stroke”.

After the death of the 79-year-old, the cardiologi­st, whom the family is suing, attributed the discharge given to the patient to the fact that he would be going on a trip abroad.

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