Agaknya ciri-ciri negeri maju macam ni. Macamana boleh hospital-hospital di 
Melaka ni menghadapi krisis kekurangan ubat bukan sejam dua, tapi dah hampir 
sebulan kehabisan dan kekurangan ubat. Ramai sangat ke orang Melaka yang sakit, 
ke Kementerian Kesihatan dah habis bekalan ubat. Tak apa, Pekida yang menjadi 
penyokong kuat BN akan pastikan Melaka tidak akan kehabisan ubat agaknya.
 
Wednesday December 7, 2011
Hospitals in Malacca out of medicine
 
MALACCA: The state government has promised fresh supply of medicine at public 
hospitals following a shortage which caused misery to patients for nearly a 
month.
 
State Health, Project Rehabilitation, Suburban Development and NGO committee 
chairman Datuk Seet Har Cheow assured the patients that the problem would be 
resolved by tomorrow.
 
“The shortage of medicine has placed patients in a limbo. The state is 
addressing the situation,” he said, adding that new supplies had been 
dispatched.
 
“We expect things to normalise in a day or two.”
 
Seet blamed the shortage on “several inevitable factors” but said the state was 
in constant touch with the Health Ministry.
 
“I can’t divulge these factors. But I strongly dismiss allegations that medical 
personnel were hoarding the drugs and secretly supplying these to private 
pharmacies,” he said, adding that the ministry was putting in place measures to 
prevent a recurrence.
Asked if the quality of the medicine would be compromised in the rush to stock 
up, Seet said: “Health isn’t something we gamble with.”
 
In Putrajaya, Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said the shortage 
should be dealt with immediately by the respective administrators.
 
He, however, was not aware of the situation in Malacca.
 
“It was not reported to me, but it shouldn’t have happened,” he said, adding 
that he had reminded all hospital and clinic admini­strative staff members to 
ensure there was enough stock.
 
“Although hospitals and clinics can sometimes run out of medicine at the end of 
the year, they should have a plan to prevent it from happening,” he said.
 
Malacca Pensioner Associations chairman J. Ram said its 2,000 members, who 
relied heavily on public hospital medicine, had been left in the lurch.
 
“Even pharmaceutical products to treat high-blood pressure patients were 
unavailable for almost a month,” he said.
 
“Many of us are elderly patients who cannot afford to get supplies from private 
pharmacies.”
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/12/7/nation/10048772&sec=nation 

Kirim email ke