The 23 linear accelerators will be dispatched to these hospitals: the KBC hospitals in Zagreb, Sestre milosrdnice Zagreb, the KBC hospitals in Split, Rijeka, and Osijek, and the KB Dubrava in Zagreb and Zadar’s general hospital.
A sum of €97 million will be invested in the networking of radiotherapy equipment into a national network to ensure a comprehensive database of radiotherapy resources for patient treatment.
The public procurement process should kick off this year.
The provision of 23 linear particle accelerators will enable Croatia to reach the EU average of five accelerators per million inhabitants.
This target is also highlighted in the country’s strategic framework for cancer treatment, which was adopted to streamline the treatment of oncology patients in Croatia.
Some of the new accelerators will replace the old machines.
An estimated 25,000 citizens in Croatia are annually diagnosed with malignant diseases, and about 13,500 cancer patients die annually.
The most prevalent cancers in male adults are prostate, lung, colon, and rectal tumors and women are most frequently diagnosed with breast, lung, colon, and ovarian tumors.
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