CKUK helicopters for heart attacks

The 24-hour services in some of the Kosovo Hospital Service clinics and University Clinic (SHSKUK) have marked great progress, helping to remove patient waiting lists to perform services in connection with the treatment of their diseases. But modernisation of this health institution is continuing further. [...]
He, in an interview for Online Economics where, according to him, the project for treating a heart attack is soon to be implemented in the first 2 hours.
He said he has support for this project, while KFOR is believed to provide their support in providing helicopters who will be in service to treat citizens everywhere in Kosovo, and within 2 hours the patient will be treated.
What we're having in priority is treating acute heart attack in the 24 hours we've accomplished, what we expect is treating a heart attack in the first two hours, we have support in this project. The patient who wants to be can come in the first 2 hours because they're golden, we have conversations with KFOR to provide us with a helicopter for this project throughout Kosovo so that people's lives can be saved in the first two hours”, Sejdiu said.
Within the framework of important projects, Sediu said it is also child cardiosurgeology.
The other important project is child cardiology, we plan it, we expect that some child patients will be operated and continue our staff that are prepared, we have staff that Macedonia doesn't have child cardiosurgeons, and what's important is the centire burrow that means all attacks in the brain should be treated in the most professional form, as well as brain intervention in the early hours, all of these expectations are that in the following months of implementation and big projects, we need to raise the level of health of our economy, he said.
Sejdiu also talked about the surgeons' strike, where he said patients who need their treatment urgently have been treated and have not suffered patients because of the strike.
He said he hopes there will be dignified salaries for doctors and cease their strikes, as this has also been a promise on the part of government officials themselves. However, Sjediu hopes that a solution will soon be found and the strike ends.












