articles | 11 December 2019

Eurostat: 1.4% of Cypriots cannot afford medical treatment

A year before the launch of the general health scheme, Eurostat figures for 2018 show that 1.7% of people in Cyprus aged 16 and above reported unmet needs for medical examination or treatment.

In fact 1.4% of people in Cyprus said they could not afford the treatment — the eighth highest rate in the EU28 while 0.2% said they wanted to wait and see whether the problem would get better on its own.

Figures published by Eurostat on Wednesday on the occasion of Universal Health Coverage Day which is marked on December 12 showed that in the EU, 3.6% of people aged 16 and above reported unmet needs for medical examination or treatment in 2018.

The most frequently reported reason was the treatment being unaffordable. 1.0% of people aged 16 and above said the treatment they needed was “too expensive”. The next most common reasons for not being treated were the existence of a “waiting list” (0.9%) or because people “wanted to wait and see if the problem got better on its own” (0.6%).

Greece reported by far the highest share of people with unmet medical needs due to treatment being unaffordable (8.3%), followed by Latvia (4.2%), Romania (3.4%), Italy (2.0%), Belgium (1.7%), Portugal (1.6%), Bulgaria (1.5%), Cyprus (1.4%) and Poland (1.1%).

In contrast, the lowest shares were reported in Czechia and Finland (close to 0.0%), whilst in majority of the EU Member States, less than 1% of the population reported unmet medical needs for financial reasons.

Source: In-Cyprus

Tags

Cooperation Partners
  • Logo for Ministry of Energy, Commerce, Industry and Tourism
  • Logo for Love Cyprus Deputy Ministry of Tourism
  • Logo for Cyprus Shipping Chamber
  • Logo for Association of Cyprus Banks
  • Logo for CYFA Cyprus
  • Logo for Invest Cyprus
  • Logo for Cyprus Chamber of Commerce and Industry
  • Logo for Cyprus International Businesses Association
  • Logo for Cyprus Investment Funds Association