The case of a doctor from Oradea who treated Covid patients according to an invented scheme sparked controversy and reached the College of Physicians



[ad_1]

A pulmonologist from Oradea claims that the anti-COVID treatment schemes in hospitals are too harsh and also defy medical oxygen treatment. His statements caught the attention of Bihor Medical College, which will discuss them next week, in a special meeting.

The Oradea doctor claims he treated up to 1,000 COVID patients and that they all escaped from the hospital. Flavia Groșan, currently employed in a private hospital, says she used cheap drugs in the treatment plan, which she said she thought of on her own. She defies protocol at the hospital, which in her opinion kills patients.

Flavia Groșan: “The treatment seemed extremely harsh, I found a cheap option, with medicines from the Ministry of Health’s nomenclature. Cheap and an incredibly beautiful combination. I have 20 years of experience in pulmonology. “

Flavia Groșan also questions the use of medical oxygen, which she believes would cause brain edema. All her statements, taken by various central television stations, came to the attention of Bihor Medical College, which was notified by a doctor from the Gerota Hospital in Bucharest.

Carmen Pantiș, president of the Bihor College of Physicians: “Flavia Groșan has treated mild and medium cases, with success, all the admiration for her, but she does not have the experience of the hospital.”

Journalist: What are the worst statements you made?

Carmen Pantiș, President of the Bihor College of Physicians: This message, which is quite serious: stay home and if you have 80% saturation, stay home.

Flavia Groșan says she treated COVID patients from all over the country online and does not know that one of them made it to the hospital. The information is not real, says Bihor Medical College.

Carmen Pantiș, president of the Bihor College of Physicians: My coworkers at the Municipal informed me that patients who started treatment with the doctor in the private office came to Pulmonology or even intensive care units.

Flavia Groșan: “I kept in touch with difficult cases, a daily connection. I don’t know, I haven’t heard of failures. “

The Ethics Commission of the Bihor College of Physicians will meet on Monday to discuss the case of the Oradea pulmonologist. Meanwhile, messages of support for medical personnel or condemnation of these statements circulate on the Internet. The verdict in your case will be given on Tuesday.

Publisher: GM

[ad_2]