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Although the market for medical devices has expanded over the past ten years, there is still significant room for growth because the majority of the medical equipment in Slovenia’s public hospitals is out-of-date and expensive to maintain.
Slovenia is currently thinking about how to restructure the healthcare industry, make the most of its health care budget, and combine many public health organisations now that a new administration in power ran on the promise of enhancing healthcare delivery.
In recent years, the government has increased its investments in specialist hospitals, such as the Oncology Institute and the Pediatric Clinic, and in the years to come, there will probably be an increase in demand for cutting-edge tools and technology.
The Ministry creates health care policy, recommends the government’s budget for the industry and its investment programme, and keeps an eye on the operations of state-owned hospitals and other healthcare facilities.
The ministry was recently forced to take over purchasing programmes and consolidate hospital contracts as a result of increasing public procurement openness, which was partly caused by financial issues with the national health account.
Slovenia medical devices market accounted for $XX Billion in 2023 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2024 to 2030.
The development of an incubator, InMedica, by a group of medical device executives, is an attempt to address that issue. The incubator is based on a network of support services that are integrally related to it, thereby creating its own medical device cluster in the unusual setting of Slovenia.
The certificate, commonly referred to as the “Digital Green Certificate,” was created in under three weeks and is based on a Better Platform-powered national clinical data repository (CDR).
A certificate is generated by the service using information from Slovenia’s national CDR. The COVID certificate makes use of integrated care record data, including already-available demographic, immunisation, and test result information.
There is no need to generate additional data just for certificate purposes because the data is already made available through previously established services provided by the national eVaccination registry and the national COVID-19 screening data management solution.