Many Hungarian pharmacies can cease operation due to the government
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More than 4,100 pharmacists are protesting against the government’s plan to allow pharmacists with a secondary school degree to work in certain drugstores instead of a university degree. The cabinet says this will protect rural drugstores, but opponents say the measure could lead to the disappearance of pharmacists from smaller towns.
The fact is that the anti-pharmacy government wants to create a huge chain, so that the winner of the planned privatisation of hospital pharmacies can then break up the pharmaceutical market, Válasz Online reports in their latest big-picture writing.
Discontent among the pharmacists
In recent years, even big city pharmacies have become specialised pick-up points. Specialised because in that place, a qualified pharmacist worker or pharmacist’s assistant orders the customer back the next day when the special package arrives. The only difference between this kind of pharmacy and a small village drugstore branch is that in the latter, the patient is guaranteed to be served by a pharmacist.
The government is preparing to reform the pharmacy system. Now, a debate has erupted over draft legislation on whether 620 pharmacies in small villages should have a qualified pharmacist. 4147 pharmacists say they should: that’s how many have signed the protest petition.

This amount of signatures out of 6300 pharmacists in the country suggests that it is not only the villagers who are demanding for the legislation to be amended. But what have urban pharmacists and especially patients in big cities got to do with it? A lot, actually: pharmacy without a pharmacist would set a dangerous precedent. That drugstore would be much cheaper to run.






Another degrading of the Hungarian health care system by the Orban government. Of course Victor and his minions can afford private care. I would seriously doubt if Victor would step one foot inside a hospital here if he was seriously ill.