Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

People with irreversible disabilities will no longer need to undergo certification every 3 years

Photo: Archive

People with irreversible disabilities should no longer appear before the regional expert commissions (TELK) every three years for re-certification. This is envisaged in a draft amendment to the Ordinance on Medical Expertise, which the Minister of Health Stoycho Katsarov presented to the National Council for Tripartite Cooperation. The document is expected to be approved by the government tomorrow.

"There is no need to prove every three years something that science has shown to be for life," Katsarov said. 

In addition to people with organ transplants or limb loss, this regulatory change will cover a number of genetic and oncological diseases. It will affect tens of thousands of patients.

After receiving a lifelong decision on their rate of working incapacity, patients will be able to request re-certification for concomitant illness if it is in their benefit.



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

President Rumen Radev and European Commissioner Ekaterina Zaharieva discuss future of scientific achievements

At a meeting with European Commissioner for Startups, Research and Innovation, Ekaterina Zaharieva, President Rumen Radev pointed out that innovations, research and technologies are the basis of the policy for the development of a..

published on 1/24/25 4:31 PM
Sergei Stanishev

Sergei Stanishev is running for BSP leader

Former leader of the left Sergei Stanishev is participating in the race for chairman of the BSP. At a press conference at BTA, Stanishev indicated that he is "entering the race" with the other candidates in order to return "meaning..

published on 1/24/25 2:59 PM

43.1% of polled Bulgarians would support a ban on TikTok

61% of Bulgarians come across fake news every day, a survey by the Myara agency conducted by January 17 shows. 17.5% encounter fake news at least once or several times a month. Just 5.5% say they have not encountered fake news. 42.6%..

published on 1/24/25 1:23 PM