QKUUK continues to lack essential drugs

Despite pledges to stabilise the supply of medicine and medical products, patients are continuing to provide themselves. Patients and family members to whom KOHA has talked, under the condition of anonymity, have presented prescriptions described by the doctor to buy them. At KSKUK, they said some of them have begun providing [...]
Despite pledges to stabilise the supply of medicine and medical products, patients are continuing to provide themselves. Patients and family members to whom KOHA has talked, under the condition of anonymity, have presented prescriptions described by the doctor to buy them. At KSKKUK, some of them have begun providing and others expect supplies over the next few days
During the stay of the TIME team on Thursday in the KKUK yard, patients and family were seen carrying drugs bought from outside.
Patients on condition of anonymity have told of products forced to provide every day for more than a week.
They have introduced prescriptions described by doctors to buy for lack of possession in the Central Barnator.
“P.g., klometol, pantprazole. That used to be fun. He told a patient to buy it.
In addition to the pantoprazol and klometol, who buy for milk patients of Abdominal Surgery, other patients have shown that there is also a shortage of albums, syringes, cotton, canons, bandages, and other medical products from the essential list.
And this lack has been observed especially in the surgery and emergency clinics.
At the University Clinical Hospital Service (SHSKUK) said one of the priorities of the new management is stabilising the supply of drugs and saving material.
Based on the written responses provided, the Central Barnatore was supplied two days ago with albumin.
“As far as rescue material is concerned, contracts are connected and we expect supply in the days ahead. Regarding the pantoprazol ampula, they're on the new Esensual List (the products for which we have not yet begun contracting due to procedures). So far we've had omprazol ampola alternative, but for the same, contracts have been terminated because of the decision to withdraw from the market (by competent bodies)”, the SSCUK's response is said.
Early in the week before the Parliamentary Commission for Health, the new director of the SKKKUK, Elvir Azizi, has declared that supplies with drugs continue to remain a challenge and that his mission is to inform the new essential list.
And Health Minister Arben Vitita stated weeks ago that by October there will be no problems with essential medicines in hospitals. According to him, the word lack and urgency in supplies will no longer be in vocabulary and terminology.












