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Opinions & Interviews

2 Apr 2024

Lukashenko wants healthcare to be accessible, affordable for all in Belarus

Lukashenko wants healthcare to be accessible, affordable for all in Belarus

GRODNO, 2 April (BelTA) – Healthcare services should be accessible and affordable for everyone in Belarus, Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko said as he was hearing a report by Healthcare Minister Aleksandr Khodzhayev in Grodno, BelTA has learned.

“We need to make sure that our healthcare is people’s healthcare, as we used to say. It should be accessible and affordable to everyone equally,” the president said setting the task for the minister.

The head of state asked the minister whether he already got his feet under the table in his new job, whether he faced any problems, and how personnel issues were being addressed.

Aleksandr Khodzhayev responded that the instructions of the head of state are being fulfilled, including on prices and personnel.

“Is Vladimir Stepanovich [Grodno Oblast Governor and former Healthcare Minister Vladimir Karanik] involved or is he an onlooker?” asked Aleksandr Lukashenko.

“He helps, we regularly get in touch to deal with the issues that arise. We have built such working relationship that I feel free to approach him for advice,” assured Aleksandr Khodzhayev.

The head of state asked whether the Healthcare Ministry is well-staffed and whether personnel issues need to be resolved.

The minister noted that candidates for vacant positions will soon be named.

“If you don’t go with the flow, but, like Karanik, stick to your course, the situation in the healthcare will be all right. I have said before that there are plenty of clans in the healthcare sector, they like to “swim” the way they please, to serve people in higher positions. It is necessary to bring things to rights,” the head of state demanded.

Aleksandr Lukashenko also touched upon personnel issues in the healthcare sector as a whole: “They say there is not enough of this, not enough of that. Doctors, nurses... Listen, we have no shortages. Yet, in our country some people, including doctors, want to work the way they do in our country, but to live like in the West and get big money. They [in the West] work around the clock, especially young people. I know this for sure. They work day and night. And they earn accordingly.”

At the same time, the head of state noted that doctors working at Belarus’ best clinics earn very decent money.

Moreover, the government has previously provided significant financial support to doctors. “What I had promised. They were paid extra during the pandemic. I told them that I would not cancel these bonuses. And I did not. The doctors wouldn’t believe that they would keep their bonuses. But we delivered on our promise. Yet, they also need to put in more effort. A wonderful profession, a wonderful job. Probably, better than any other career in the world. Of course, it comes with responsibility and requires hard work. Recalibrate your work and do your job properly,” said Aleksandr Lukashenko.

Vladimir Karanik remarked that the financial support requested by the president for doctors was even bigger than what the Healthcare Ministry asked for.

“Few people remember now, but I remember well that our proposals for financial incentives during the pandemic were increased several times by your decision. We didn’t even ask for that much,” he said.

 

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