Published: 1 Oct 11 10:56 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/36474/20111001/
Despite stricter rules, Swedish hospitals still struggle to avoid overcrowding and any institution caught breaking the rules will now face heftier fines, after previous measures have shown only limited effects, according to a report by Sveriges Radio (SR).
What do you think? Leave your comment below.
With one 18-year-old remanded in custody after four nights of rioting in Stockholm, Sweden's Integration Minister Erik Ullenhag said the rioters are a small minority, and did not represent a clash between young people in the suburbs and Swedish society. READ () »
A viral Facebook post about the terror of being targeted by stone-throwing youths during to the ongoing Stockholm riots has made firefighter Mattias Lassén into something of a Swedish folk hero, and The Local's pick for Swede of the Week. READ () »
Fresh from another near miss with a hulking behemoth of an elk, ex-Londoner Paul Connolly offers up a theory on how the prospect of imminent collisions with wayward wildlife affects the driving habits of Swedes up north. READ () »
The government and its main opposition have agreed to new rules governing performance requirements and profits at publicly funded, privately managed free schools. READ () »
Scientists at three Swedish universities have managed to muddle through the genetic code for fir trees, seven times larger than the human genome, with potential benefits for the Swedish forestry industry. READ () »
The Borås Zoo in western Sweden has welcomed a rare new elephant calf as African elephant Dudu gave birth on Wednesday after two years of pregnancy. READ () »
Wednesday night saw more burning cars, smashed windows, and stone throwing at police in at least 15 suburbs around Stockholm, as the fourth night of riots swept the Swedish capital. READ () »
Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet has signed up to offer free online courses, joining a network of 27 universities worldwide that reach nearly a million students. READ () »
| 23/05 | 301751 | Stockholm |
| 23/05 | Account Executive | Sverige |
| 23/05 | Account Executive/Office ManagerToolbox Marketing | Stockholm, STHM |
| 23/05 | Accounting Manager (m/f) | Stockholm |
| 23/05 | Application Owner AXNet Entertainment | Stockholm |
| 23/05 | Area sales ManagerGemalto | Stockholm, STHM |
More news from Germany at thelocal.de
More news from France at thelocal.fr
More news from Norway at thelocal.no
More news from Switzerland at thelocal.ch
Register now for:
> Free use of noticeboard
> Special discounts
> Weekly news roundup
> Unlimited use of discuss
Be British, be sincere and be bold »
"Sweden is a veritable smorgåsbord for UK business. I see our work as a bit like a kind of dragon’s den for both for larger and smaller British companies. It is about matching the UK companies, not with cash, but with Swedish market opportunities." READ »
Your comments about this article:
The comments below have not been moderated in advance and are not produced by The Local unless clearly stated. Readers are responsible for the content of their own comments. Comments that breach our terms and conditions will be removed.
Bottom line? The hospitals will turn away people in need of medical attention because of the fear of heavy fines. Who will ultimately suffer???? WE WILL!!!!
But for Gods sake people, do not write any letters or make any phone calls to your government officials demanding change! After all, this is Sweden and we certainly would not want to upset anyone or cause any waves at all. For SURE we will unquestioningly believe the govenment has our best interests at heart. (Wonder if the government officials are put on waiting lists when they need a hospital visit?
Sweden. Again........no accountability and no consequences.
Welcome to health provision post-Thatcher. In England they've had such overcrowding for years. Thatcher cut hospital budgets, cut services, and so naturally the queues formed. Building more hospitals would be the answer (in Sweden and in England) but the nice little politicians will cry and say "we don't have the money.:
All this said, when you really need them, the medical professonals here in Sweden are great.
When I broke both bones in my leg a few years ago the care was outstanding. Total cost to me, 50 SEK.
My wife will have eye surgery for cataracts on Monday. Total cost is 900 SEK. Her surgeon is OUTSTANDING and for the first time in 59 years, she will not need glasses.
Instead of opening up this tower they make 90% of the sick people that show up here drive for an hour to a bigger town with an overcrowded hospital. It makes no sense.
Everyone should read, and then reread, CurlyOne's note. It describes perfectly why socialized medicine is a failed model. The incentives in socialized medicine are all wrong (they are wrong in a capitalist system as well, but that is a story for another day). The amount of medical care delivered is not based on the medical needs of the patient population, but rather on a bureaucratically set financial target. Things are so backwards that hospitals are punished for delivering care above target levels! NUTS!
Imagine this: The government tells Volvo that they are only allowed to sell a certain number of cars each year, and if they sell more they will only get paid at a 30% rate. It doesn't matter if a person needs a car, and it doesn't matter if a person desires to buy a car. The government makes it economically untenable for Volvo to sell cars above the preset number.
If you believe that it is crazy for the government to control the number of cars that Volvo is allowed to sell, then it is equally crazy to allow the government to control health care. And please do not tell me that the government has the right to control health care because the government "pays" for it. On the contrary, the government doesn't pay for anything. The people pay for it through taxes. Once again the Volvo analogy works here. Could you imagine a "car tax" created by the government so that a fund is created for the purpose of purchasing cars for the citizens of Sweden? The government would then decide how many cars would be distributed each year, and which citizens would get one. That, my friends, is socialized medicine.
Now the politicians are treating the health care system in the same manner. Once it was a reputable system, but politicians started to cut its budget and demand more of it.
Go back and read Krrodman (#8) and Curly One (#7). The problem is government and bureacrats in control, rather than medical people and patients.