Macron
injects more cash into France's strained healthcare
system
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[September 18, 2018]
By Matthias Blamont
PARIS (Reuters) - President Emmanuel Macron
on Tuesday promised extra money and more doctors in rural areas to ease
pressure on France's hospitals, which are creaking under the weight of
budget constraints and closures of clinics outside towns and cities.
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Spending on healthcare will increase by 2.5 percent in 2019, higher
than the initial 2.3 percent target and amounting to an additional
400 million euros ($470 million) in a near 200 billion euro budget,
Macron said.
"Without changes, the hospital system will collapse," Macron said in
a speech at the Elysee Palace. "We need to rethink how we organize
healthcare for the next 50 years."
France's public healthcare system is considered one of the world's
best, but an ageing population and financial constraints have put it
under strain.
Patients increasingly complain of overcrowded emergency rooms and,
in rural areas, travel times to the nearest clinic, while nurses
frequently bemoan a shortage of beds and staff shortages.
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Macron's announcement came days after he unveiled a separate 8
billion euro plan to fight poverty in France, where some 8.8 million
people live below the poverty threshold.
Long in the planning, Macron hopes his social reforms will help
counter criticism from left-wingers that he is a president of the
rich and help turnaround a sharp fall in popularity.
Macron also promised the recruitment of 4,000 medical assistants to
handle paperwork and free-up doctors in urban areas to treat
patients.
(Reporting by Matthias Blamont, Julie Carriat, Marine Pennetier;
Editing by Richard Balmforth)
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