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Denunciation/ Chemo drugs missing from the QSUT, sold contraband in front of the Oncology Department

Denunciation/ Chemo drugs missing from the QSUT, sold contraband in front of the

Journalist Osman Stafa has denounced a big scandal related to the Oncology department at QSUNT, where chemotherapy drugs are being smuggled. According to Staff, many pharmacies around QSUNT offer contraband chemo drugs, which are missing in the Oncology department.

 He emphasizes that he has evidence for this, but he cannot publish it because the lives of the whistleblowers are at risk. The staff also talks about data showing that patients were forced to pay not only for medicines, but also for the "services" of doctors who collaborated with the smugglers. He demands a full investigation into the matter and considers the situation an unacceptable scandal.

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Chemo drugs are sold even before Oncology!

In my information, based on evidence and facts, it is proven that many pharmacies around QSUNT and not only, sell contraband chemo. (I can't publish conversations, because people are put at risk).

During these last 5 years, shortages of chemicals have been terrible. Smugglers have benefited from these shortages.

According to the data I have collected, chemo drugs brokers also entered the hospital, to ask the doctors to take patients to them to buy the drugs.

Patients out of trouble, and what they were facing, went and bought them, not only paying the value of the smuggled chemo, but also paying a price to the doctor.

How does this work?

For example, contraband heceptin was bought for 800 euros.

But if the patient did not go referred by the doctor and the smuggler obeyed, he received Herceptin for 200 euros less. (I will publish these testimonies with sound and image when the time comes).

Below I will publish the case of a person who bought chemotherapy at the door of the Oncology Clinic. Cost of goserelin? 262 thousand ALL.
This situation is scandalous and unacceptable. (This happened a few weeks ago).

This situation is also unacceptable, as the doctors and the Head of Oncology, Silvana Çeliku, were aware of this phenomenon and did not raise it as a concern. But they did accept it.

Why did they accept it?

Why didn't they speak up when they couldn't treat cancer patients?

How certain doctors became accomplices of smuggling?

Maybe there is another reason why the Oncology doctors are "persuaded" not to talk?

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