The lack of equipment and supplies in BiH hospitals and clinics, despite 987 million KM in spending last year, is an example of the waste and inefficiency that is bankrupting this country’s health care.
Every sixth representative elected to the Brčko District Assembly in the last elections has been convicted of a criminal offense. Most of them will now have the opportunity to question the work of the prosecutor’s office that indicted them, from their seats in the assembly.
A convicted drug dealer, a vote trafficker, and a forger will soon have the opportunity to judge the work of the Prosecutor’s Office in Brčko – the institution that has proven their criminal acts. These convicted individuals are now members of the newly elected Brčko District Assembly, where the prosecutor will be required to submit an annual report on the work of the prosecution.
Abdulah Iljazović from Naša stranka, Pejo Mendeš from the Hrvatska seljačka stranka, and…
The lack of equipment and supplies in BiH hospitals and clinics, despite 987 million KM in spending last year, is an example of the waste and inefficiency that is bankrupting this country’s health care.
CIN’s team goes looking for the 987 million KM spent last year on BiH health care. Auditors and health officials say they cannot find it.
In one month of reporting, a team of nine journalists from CIN talked to doctors, patients and health care officials to find out how medical ethics had collapsed.
Center for Investigative Reporting (CIN) takes a look at health care through the eyes of the people who give it and receive it.
Dr. Zijad Lagumdžija of Sarajevo became the first doctor in BiH history to be convicted of soliciting bribes from his patients. While some of his colleagues deny there is any real problem with bribery, others think it is a harmful custom that should end. They agree that patients like the three who complained about Dr. Lagumdžija can make that happen.
BiH patients have been saying thanks with increasingly large sums of cash to their doctors but their doctors have not been saying “no thanks,” according to health officials and social experts.
The lack of equipment and supplies in BiH hospitals and clinics, despite 987 million KM in spending last year, is an example of the waste and inefficiency that is bankrupting this country’s health care.
CIN’s team goes looking for the 987 million KM spent last year on BiH health care. Auditors and health officials say they cannot find it.
In one month of reporting, a team of nine journalists from CIN talked to doctors, patients and health care officials to find out how medical ethics had collapsed.
Center for Investigative Reporting (CIN) takes a look at health care through the eyes of the people who give it and receive it.
Dr. Zijad Lagumdžija of Sarajevo became the first doctor in BiH history to be convicted of soliciting bribes from his patients. While some of his colleagues deny there is any real problem with bribery, others think it is a harmful custom that should end. They agree that patients like the three who complained about Dr. Lagumdžija can make that happen.
BiH patients have been saying thanks with increasingly large sums of cash to their doctors but their doctors have not been saying “no thanks,” according to health officials and social experts.
The Center for Investigative Reporting (CIN) in Sarajevo is unique in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the first organization of its kind to be established in Balkans. CIN is dedicated to investigative reporting, aimed toward providing fair and unbiased information, based on evidences and solid proof, to BiH citizens who need to make educated decisions.
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