The Prague Post - Romania opens first crowd-funded hospital

EUR -
AED 4.272085
AFN 77.35243
ALL 96.725801
AMD 445.239397
ANG 2.08271
AOA 1066.712728
ARS 1663.190009
AUD 1.76553
AWG 2.095328
AZN 1.981325
BAM 1.956167
BBD 2.34364
BDT 141.706593
BGN 1.956126
BHD 0.438526
BIF 3431.626727
BMD 1.163263
BND 1.507483
BOB 8.040474
BRL 6.206943
BSD 1.163618
BTN 103.199366
BWP 15.491907
BYN 3.955242
BYR 22799.960628
BZD 2.340239
CAD 1.623067
CDF 2803.46436
CHF 0.932321
CLF 0.028199
CLP 1106.22861
CNY 8.281855
CNH 8.314686
COP 4524.221779
CRC 585.609895
CUC 1.163263
CUP 30.826477
CVE 110.859484
CZK 24.361522
DJF 206.735157
DKK 7.46651
DOP 73.227466
DZD 151.343013
EGP 55.32363
ERN 17.448949
ETB 170.182318
FJD 2.631289
FKP 0.865436
GBP 0.867742
GEL 3.164133
GGP 0.865436
GHS 14.494699
GIP 0.865436
GMD 83.755049
GNF 10092.472736
GTQ 8.915673
GYD 243.444638
HKD 9.05173
HNL 30.477026
HRK 7.533761
HTG 152.258573
HUF 391.519316
IDR 19267.129994
ILS 3.780315
IMP 0.865436
INR 103.266082
IQD 1523.87492
IRR 48944.303568
ISK 141.440965
JEP 0.865436
JMD 186.244951
JOD 0.824702
JPY 177.615171
KES 150.415679
KGS 101.727534
KHR 4676.318649
KMF 493.223364
KPW 1046.937305
KRW 1655.928514
KWD 0.356528
KYD 0.969682
KZT 628.657974
LAK 25207.915791
LBP 104170.228482
LKR 352.106076
LRD 212.877498
LSL 19.949726
LTL 3.434814
LVL 0.703646
LYD 6.322293
MAD 10.604893
MDL 19.751707
MGA 5205.603178
MKD 61.630274
MMK 2441.970899
MNT 4184.631831
MOP 9.32811
MRU 46.391192
MUR 53.219173
MVR 17.800639
MWK 2020.009339
MXN 21.330393
MYR 4.904341
MZN 74.275077
NAD 19.949725
NGN 1712.10297
NIO 42.599017
NOK 11.607332
NPR 165.118986
NZD 2.009767
OMR 0.447284
PAB 1.163613
PEN 4.007432
PGK 4.868837
PHP 67.499467
PKR 327.080606
PLN 4.255694
PYG 8125.524831
QAR 4.235559
RON 5.093
RSD 117.204593
RUB 94.746976
RWF 1683.241991
SAR 4.363125
SBD 9.622231
SCR 16.576877
SDG 699.696802
SEK 10.969864
SGD 1.507118
SHP 0.914142
SLE 27.00513
SLL 24393.053976
SOS 664.798612
SRD 44.381402
STD 24077.201636
STN 24.864753
SVC 10.181911
SYP 15124.53145
SZL 19.949677
THB 37.875433
TJS 10.821484
TMT 4.083054
TND 3.41885
TOP 2.724477
TRY 48.542582
TTD 7.901483
TWD 35.526203
TZS 2854.738894
UAH 48.251855
UGX 3996.750028
USD 1.163263
UYU 46.448717
UZS 14075.485993
VES 219.871682
VND 30663.620518
VUV 141.010043
WST 3.223244
XAF 656.08012
XAG 0.023842
XAU 0.00029
XCD 3.143777
XCG 2.097094
XDR 0.813948
XOF 655.504115
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.020437
ZAR 19.953665
ZMK 10470.761184
ZMW 27.601061
ZWL 374.570307
  • RBGPF

    -1.0800

    77.14

    -1.4%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.71

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    1.9000

    76.42

    +2.49%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    73.61

    -0.37%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    16.79

    -0.42%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.33

    -0.29%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    43.35

    -0.35%

  • RIO

    1.4500

    67.7

    +2.14%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    45.84

    +0.87%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    15.4

    -0.91%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    14.12

    +0.35%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    23.23

    -0.26%

  • BTI

    -0.3800

    51.6

    -0.74%

  • AZN

    -0.4900

    85.38

    -0.57%

  • BP

    -0.4500

    34.52

    -1.3%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    11.27

    0%

Romania opens first crowd-funded hospital
Romania opens first crowd-funded hospital / Photo: Daniel MIHAILESCU - AFP

Romania opens first crowd-funded hospital

At Romania's new crowd-funded children's cancer hospital, one-year-old Eric Ivan eagerly walked up and down the corridor, his mother holding his hands to steady him.

Text size:

The bright, attractive building is a far cry from the drab facilities next door -- and stands out as the first hospital in Romania financed exclusively through donations.

No less than 350,000 people and almost 8,000 companies contributed to it with the drive led by a civil group, frustrated by the inadequate facilities in the EU country with the lowest public spending on health.

"Romanians just need things to believe in," said Oana Gheorghiu, who co-founded the Give Life Association that collected the money.

For Carmen Uscatu, the group's other co-founder, the new hospital is proof that "anything is possible".

- 'Radical change' -

Out of the total raised, some 20 million euros came from two- and four-euro text messages, according to Give Life.

The new facility is a "slap in the face of politicians who didn't want and couldn't do anything for healthcare in this country", actor and musician Tudor Chirila, one of its donors, wrote on Facebook.

Founded in 2012, Give Life helps build health infrastructure throughout the country.

The Bucharest project was born in 2015 when the two women saw children with cancer and their families queueing outside a single toilet in the Marie Curie state hospital.

At first, the idea was just to modernise the oncology wards, but the project expanded into constructing a completely new building next to the old one.

Eric, diagnosed last year with neuroblastoma, started his treatment in the old hospital building before moving to the new one for his chemotherapy.

For Eric's mom, 41-year-old Ildiz Ivan, this was a "radical change" from where she had had to take Eric for treatment before.

"He has more space to run around, to play," she told AFP, seated in a bright playroom equipped with bouncy balls and a play kitchen.

"If it weren't for the doctors and nurses, I'd feel right at home."

With a capacity of 140 beds, the new building includes oncology, haemato-oncology, surgery, intensive care and neurosurgery units. It also has playrooms, a cinema, a radio studio and even an observatory on the roof.

And the Give Life organisation donated the whole facility to the state.

Haematologist Madalina Schmidt was among the doctors welcoming the new hospital. The conditions there were "much better", she said.

And because the children and their parents are happier, interactions between the doctors and their patients are also easier, said Schmidt, 49, who moved to Bucharest from the eastern city of Iasi this year to work in the new facility.

- Far from done -

Since 2015, Romania -- besieged by political instability -- has had no less than 12 health ministers.

"Incompetence, lack of vision, and at times corruption" have infected the state health-care system, said Gheorghiu.

In 2020, the nation of 19 million people had the lowest average health expenditure per inhabitant in the EU, according to the latest Eurostat data.

While many doctors are leaving the country, patients also have to put up with dilapidated and overcrowded hospitals.

Most of the country's hospitals were built before 1970 and "no longer meet the requirements of current regulations", a recent Court of Accounts report said.

So Gheorghiu and Uscatu are far from done.

They are already raising money for another new building to house other departments of the old hospital. They want to transform the grounds into a medical campus.

"We can't stop here," Uscatu said.

They want to bring the survival rate of children with cancer in Romania, currently 70 percent, closer to the 81-percent EU-wide average.

Uscatu wants to get to the point where parents no longer have to look abroad to get the treatment they need for their sick children.

"It's not just about a hospital, but about an entire system," Gheorghiu said.

K.Dudek--TPP