Connect with us

Costa Blanca

When it comes to community health spending, Torrevieja is bottom

Torrevieja Hospital

The Torrevieja department’s 2023 budget was 218,988,509 euros, which, when divided by the total number of residents, results in 1,026 euros spent on health care per resident. But the actual numbers are different. The sum is lowered to 900 euros when the unregistered population is taken into account. Official figures show that the Valencian Community’s average per capita health spending in 2025 was 1,586 euros, the fourth lowest of all the autonomous communities.

As a result, health spending is 560 euros less than the average for Valencia based only on the census population. “A flagrant injustice,” the Platform for 100% Public and Quality Health, which continues to organise to call on the Generalitat to take action to address this disparity, publicly denounced.

Riches


Because of the residential tourism industry, they believe that Vega Baja is one of the areas that contributes the most to the community’s prosperity. This action promotes ongoing population expansion. With 390,228 residents in 2024, the area has grown by 58.5% over the previous 25 years.

In practice, the substantial volume of seasonal, unregistered people throughout the year is added to the total of 213,500 registered residents in the department of Torrevieja. The Health Department’s own 2023 management report, which was the most recent to be published, states that during the summer, this number triples and surpasses three quarters of a million residents. Since November 2021, when the Generalitat acquired direct authority of the region, the protected population has continued to increase.

Not enough


The group claims that this is the reason why the public health system is unable to adequately address needs, “which causes long delays in waiting lists for both primary and specialised care, as well as for surgical operations,” and why the most serious patients are referred to private facility. a practice that results in private health centres offering up to six distinct options to the same patient.

Advertisement

The group claims that during the past 15 years, Ribera’s private management has placed a heavy strain on the department. An “obsolete and insufficient” primary care network, a hospital without a pathological anatomy laboratory that just opened, the lowest bed-to-population ratio, a lack of space for warehouses, consultations, and medical departments, a private computer system that is still in use today, and a lengthy string of labour disputes over the suitability of subrogated labour personnel in the public system are just a few of the significant flaws that were “revealed” by the reversal three years ago.

Privatisation


In 2023, the former Botànic government allocated 17.3 million euros for hospital and health centre emergency repairs. According to the same source, the new PP Government lowered investments to 1.1 and prolonged the deadlines for completing previously planned projects to the conclusion of the legislative session. Three months ago, this platform, which had almost 6,000 signatories, approached the Valencian Executive to ask for more funding for the department. In order to directly communicate these demands to the minister, it has also asked to meet with him.

Platform spokespersons Manuel Gómez and Eva Delafuente claim that the public network’s saturation serves as “the breeding ground for the proliferation of business initiatives for the private health network.” They claim that it is contradictory that while Vega Baja towns run by the PP, the same party that controls the Consell, do not call for an increase in the public health budget, investment in the public network is prohibited. Regarding the private hospital that Ribera has suggested in Orihuela Costa, they state that “they look very favourably on the proposal of private initiatives in the heat of the public.”

Advertisement

Discover more from Costa Blanca Daily

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Costa Blanca

Cleaning staff will go on indefinite strike at Madrid airport

Madrid Airport

The AENA-run cleaning service at Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas Airport has announced an indefinite strike that will start for night shift employees on April 8th at 11:00 p.m. The state Federation of Services, Mobility, and Consumer Affairs, the UGT, released a statement stating that the step was necessary because of “the need to address the unification of agreements, the repeated breaches of these agreements, and the existing shortage of staff.” They also bemoan “the new cleaning requirements and methods imposed by AENA,” which they say “has generated a situation of constant stress and pressure” for the sanitation staff.

Twenty-nine percent more passengers travelled in 2024 than the year before, totalling 66,196,984. According to FeSMC-UGT, this notable rise implies that cleaning employees must bear a heavy “physical and emotional burden” each day in order to deliver high-quality service. Serveo Facility Management SAU, which operates in Terminals 1, 2, and 3, Serveo Servicios SAU, which operates in Terminal 4, and Optima Facility Services, which operates T-4 Satellite, are the companies that are impacted by the strike.

The striking committee draws attention to sick leave coverage, which is “numerous” across all terminals, in relation to unmet agreements. “We were without a replacement for as long as forty or forty-five days. The firms guaranteed that this issue will be fixed. We had to quadruple the regions that should typically be given because of the extreme wear and tear. According to Fernanda Correira, a committee member who represents the Workers’ Union (USO), “making promises seems very easy, but delivering is not so easy.” In addition, AENA has started surveying passengers about the quality of its services. To make sure the image is as “perfect” as possible, a sizable number of cleaning personnel are sent to the site where one of these surveys is conducted. On the other hand, other terminal components are overlooked.

Committee members have described nighttime as “the most critical time.” For the cleaning staff, the homeless population is a “serious problem” because it has grown from 30 or 40 to around 500 in the past ten years. They must travel two by two in the event of an incident, thus they work in terror. They claim that cleaning their regions takes a lot more time and effort and has an impact on everything else.

In the past, we employees would return home exhausted from the physical strain, but now days, the emotional component is what matters most. From the beginning to the end, we are under pressure to perform. In addition to the businesses, we also voice our displeasure with AENA, their client. Although everyone wants the airport to be clean, nobody appreciates the job we do. Not even the travellers, who occasionally even make fun of us. One of the 700 employees that make up the cleaning services workforce, including temporary workers, states, “We have a huge amount of sick leave for mental health reasons.”

Advertisement

The ASAE union, which has been against AENA for the “out-of-control” situation with regard to the number of homeless persons, says it “supports the strike due to AENA’s continued financial cuts in contracts.” “We completely understand that they want to work in decent and safe environments and not have to endure insults, threats, and attacks from the 500 people living in poverty at Barajas Airport, another reason for the protest,” they say. The striking employees “regret in advance any deep inconvenience this situation may cause to airport users.”

In the meantime, attempts to address the homeless disagreement between Madrid City Council and infrastructure administrators have not been successful. Both parties have remained silent during the “high tension” moments, expressing their profound care about the matter while frequently ignoring their obligations. The trend has not improved at all, and it may possibly worsen in the upcoming months due to the absence of alternative housing for these individuals, even if winter and the unfavourable weather are ending.


Discover more from Costa Blanca Daily

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Continue Reading

Costa Blanca

Alicante is now part of TUI’s city break package

TUI

With the addition of Alicante and Salzburg to its portfolio of city breaks, TUI UK&I has given its customers even more options when it comes to vacation planning.


There are currently 57 city breaks available for tourists looking for quick vacations thanks to TUI’s quick expansion of its city break packages, which has seen the addition of six more cities since January.

Alicante - Costa Blanca - Spain

Travellers can enjoy a combination of leisurely beach days and exploring the city of Alicante, which is teeming with amazing architecture from the Mediaeval to the Modernist periods. There are lots of local bars to check out along the waterfront, and it’s easy to go from the beach to the bustling city centre.

Salzburg is a vibrant city with a wealth of museums, culture, stunning mountain views, and architecture that transports you to a Renaissance painting. Salzburg has a lot to offer tourists of all stripes, including a large number of local taverns, beer, and traditional food vendors.

And since Salzburg is the birthplace of the Sound of Music, there’s no better way to commemorate the movie’s 60th anniversary than to take a trip there and experience the beloved 1959 musical.

Advertisement

Discover more from Costa Blanca Daily

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Continue Reading

Costa Blanca

Family rescued from house fire in Villajoyosa

Villajoyosa

Yesterday afternoon, Monday 31st March, a fire started on the bottom floor of a house near the railway bridge in Villajoyosa, forcing a family to evacuate. However, no one there needed medical care, according to municipal sources.

The local police, the Guardia Civil, firefighters from the Provincial Consortium attached to the Benidorm fire station, and an ambulance—which was eventually unnecessary—were among the emergency services sent to the scene.

Throughout the late afternoon, a large portion of the town could see the smoke column, which was coming from the Costes district.


Discover more from Costa Blanca Daily

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Continue Reading

Adverts

Events Calendar

Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
Sun
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
31
1
2
3
5
6
7
8
9
11
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
1
2
3
4
Alicante Car Show 4th - 6th April
April 4, 2025 - April 6, 2025    
10:00 - 21:00
This weekend, Alicante will host the biggest car show in the province. The 21st edition of Sobre 2 ruedas and the 53rd edition of Firauto, [...]
Lenny Kravitz in Concert in A Coruña
April 10, 2025    
21:30 - 23:00
Lenny Kravitz will be preforming live at the Coliseum, C. Francisco Pérez Carballo, 2, 15008 A Coruña on Thursday 10th April this year. Leonard Albert [...]
Torrevieja Book Fair
April 12, 2025 - April 21, 2025    
All Day
The 27th edition of the Torrevieja Book Fair, which will take place on Paseo Vista Alegre from Saturday, April 12th to Monday, April 21st. For [...]
Lenny Kravitz in Concert in Pamplona/Iruña
April 12, 2025    
21:00 - 22:30
Lenny Kravitz will be preforming live at the Navarra Arena, Pamplona/Iruña on Saturday April 12th 9:00 PM this year. Leonard Albert Kravitz, born on May [...]
Holy Week in Torrevieja 2025
April 13, 2025 - April 20, 2025    
All Day
From April 13 (Palm Sunday) to April 20, 2025, there will be Holy Week. Following the lunar schedule, Holy Week takes place during the same [...]
Events on April 4, 2025
Events on April 10, 2025
Events on April 12, 2025
Events on April 13, 2025

Adverts

Trending