Cseke said that, once approved by the Government, the law regulating the co-payment system for healthcare services will be submitted to Parliament for debates.
The minister added talks also focused on the measures Romania has implemented lately, stressing the most important measure targets the introduction of the national healthcare card, which was approved in September through Government Decision.
Cseke and Franks also touched the issue of state’s overdue debts towards hospitals and pharmacies.
The Romanian Government pledged that it will introduce the co-payment system for healthcare services and that exemptions from co-payment will not exceed 40% of patients, according to Romania’s loan agreement with the International Monetary Fund and the European Commission. A draft law regulating the healthcare co-payment system was submitted to the Government by Health Ministry officials at the end of April 2010. Finance Ministry officials asked at that time the law be revised, arguing some of its provisions still put pressure on the state budget.
An IMF mission is currently in Bucharest to review Romania’s progress under the stand-by arrangement, which was approved in May 2009. The IMF loan is part of a larger financial package that also includes funds from the European Commission, the World Bank and other international lenders.
Romania received so far around EUR11.5 billion in IMF money and EUR3.6 billion from the EU. According to the terms of the IMF deal, the country should receive mid-December the seventh installment worth some EUR870 million.