Health insurer counting its losses as government moves to scrap costly and inefficient electronic health records project
The Czech government has announced its decision to dump a costly electronic health records project launched ten years ago. The project which was to facilitate communication between doctors regarding treatment of individual patients failed to get off the ground properly and was frequently criticized for lack of transparency.
“IZIP doubtless had a number of advantages, but as far as the big picture is concerned it failed to meet the set goals and it certainly failed to show adequate results for the money spent.”
The money spent is a staggering 1.8 billion crowns and the opposition says it wants to know who is to blame for the money squandered. Social Democrat leader Bohuslav Sobotka has demanded the setting up of a special parliamentary commission to deal with the matter. Minister Heger is likewise of the opinion that IZIP should be investigated, but he says he is in favour of a standard investigation by the police. He has not ruled out filing a criminal complaint against an unknown culprit should there be sufficient evidence of mismanagement of funds.
In the meantime the minister is busy outlining conditions for a tender on a new electronic health records project that would help take the country’s health care into the 21st century. Rather than leaving the task in the hands of one insurer he wants to link up a complex system of already existing data bases run by hospitals, GPs and specialists and make it compulsory –through an amendment to the law – for doctors to use the new system once it is up and running. Since –according to the minister’s words -nothing can be salvaged from the ill-fated IZIP the new project will once again cost taxpayers billions of crowns.