Administration of Bucharest Hospitals: Approximately 22,000 children and adolescents in Romania suffer from mental illnesses

Administration of Bucharest Hospitals: Approximately 22,000 children and adolescents in Romania suffer from mental illnesses
Administration of Bucharest Hospitals: Approximately 22,000 children and adolescents in Romania suffer from mental illnesses
--

The Bucharest Hospitals and Medical Services Administration announces, Friday evening, that over 22,000 children and adolescents in Romania suffer from mental illnesses, and the current infrastructure no longer meets the current requirements. That is why the institution signed a protocol for the construction of a new building for the Pediatric Psychiatry Department of the Obregia Hospital.

“Bucharest City Hall and ASSMB – Bucharest Hospitals and Medical Services Administration focus their attention on a sensitive and extremely important subject: the mental health of children and adolescents. In addition to the amounts allocated every year from the local budget for this purpose, we make continuous efforts to attract new sources of funding that will contribute to improving the treatment conditions and increasing the quality of the medical services offered”, they wrote, on Friday evening, on Facebook , ASSMB representatives.

They state that the Prof. Dr. Alexandru Obregia Clinical Psychiatry Hospital, a reference unit in the field of Psychiatry, celebrated 100 years since its foundation and needs an infrastructure commensurate with the needs and hopes of the little ones.

Read more HERE

Follow the news on PSNews.ro and on Google News

The article is in Romanian

Romania

Tags: Administration Bucharest Hospitals Approximately children adolescents Romania suffer mental illnesses

-

PREV Radu Pietreanu, guest in Gala Romania, you are the Champion!, in the special Easter edition broadcast on Sunday, from 20.00, on Antena 1. “I am proud to be Romanian, because Romania is, finally, champion, in Europe, at …drink!”
NEXT The chart showing life expectancy in the countries of the European Union