PM urges cancer hospital to improve patients’ satisfaction

PM urges cancer hospital to improve patients’ satisfaction hinh anh 1Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc (third from left) at the event (Photo: VNA)
 
Hanoi (VNA)
awarded third-class to K Hospital, Vietnam’s leading cancer
hospital, during a ceremony in Hanoi on July 18 celebrating its 50th anniversary.

Speaking at the event, PM Phuc expressed his delight at learning
that the hospital has adopted technological advances for treatment.

Not only improving cancer check-ups and treatment, the
hospital has also helped build tumour faculties in cities and provinces and a
network of national cancer prevention system. It offered training and
transferred technology to lower-level hospitals, contributing to cutting
treatment costs and strengthening patients’ trust.

In Vietnam, there are 165,000 new cancer cases each year and
300,000 patients are living with the disease.

The PM assigned the hospital to continue its vanguard role
to become the leading tumour centre in the region, a trustworthy destination
for not only patients but also international friends.

About future orientations, the hospital was asked to further
improve its check-up and treatment, take patients’ satisfaction as a
measurement for value, enhance scientific research and training, as well as
international cooperation, especially with French institutes.

Together with improving medical staff’s capacity, it must step
up early screening and discovery of cancer cases.

As for the hospital’s self-autonomy project, the leader
suggested rallying domestic and foreign resources to upgrade its infrastructure
and develop its personnel into a high-quality workforce.

Each year, the Vietnamese people spend over 2 billion USD on
medical treatment, mostly cancer, in foreign countries.

Previously known as Curie Indochina Institute, the hospital
was founded on October 19, 1923 by Pierre Moullin, a French national with an
aim to treat cancer for Indochinese and French people.

On July 6, 1926, the institute changed its name to Radium
Institute, the only cancer research centre in Indochina.

In 1959, it merged with Phu Doan hospital, now known as Viet
Duc hospital, to become a cancer faculty during 1959-1969. Later in 1969, the
Health Ministry decided to establish .

The hospital now has a 1,500-strong staff and 2,400 beds.-VNA

VNA

Source: VietnamPlus

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