"Fact" daily writes:
Barely half a year has passed since the introduction of the "Electronic Prescriptions" system, and the consequences of its "undigested" half-bakedness are already evident.
The other day, about two dozen pharmacies in Armenia, publicly known companies, representing more than 600 operating pharmacies in total, issued an alarm-announcement.
Briefly, the alarm of the pharmacy companies, if not the cry, is that the "electronic prescription" system does not work, there are both organizational and technical, in addition, serious legal and administrative problems.
Many pharmacies are faced with astronomical fines, the threat of them and the real danger of bankruptcy.
This is despite the fact that when making the said decision, many warned that the introduction of that model would put an unprepared network on the brink of collapse.
The collapse has come and knocks on the door of the pharmacy sector, so Nikol Pashinyan and his health minister can register this achievement in their huge "passive".
Specialists in the field are warning even now that if this continues for a little while, tomorrow, the next day, the population's medical supply will be put into question.
In short, pharmacies may simply go bankrupt and close, and those in need of medication will probably be urged by the Pashinyan authorities to say "demp-demphu" instead of antibiotics, or clap instead of taking pressure-regulating pills.