Region Dalarna to bolster hearing care with added resources

Region Dalarna plans to strengthen hearing care through targeted investments in the 2026 budget. This includes recruiting more audiologists to reduce waiting times. Efforts have already shortened queues, but challenges persist due to the pandemic and an aging population.

Hearing care in Dalarna has been marked by long waiting times in recent years, a criticism that Sofia Jarl (C), chair of the health and medical care committee in Region Dalarna, describes as justified. No one should have to wait unreasonably long for help with their hearing, she emphasizes in an article in Dala-Demokraten.

Region Dalarna has prioritized strengthening the service step by step during the mandate period. In the 2026 budget, extra resources are allocated specifically for hearing care, enabling the recruitment of more audiologists. More specialists mean more patients can be treated and waiting times can be shortened successively.

Parallel to this, hearing care has been developed through an action plan focused on accessibility. The operations prioritize new visits, improve planning and follow-up, and collaborate more closely with primary care. These measures are starting to yield results: queues have decreased compared to previous years, and waiting times have shortened, though more work is needed to achieve full accessibility.

The background to the challenges is national. The pandemic created a large care debt across the country, while the need for hearing care increases with an aging population and a shortage of competence. For the Center Party, the direction is clear: care should be close to people and function in everyday life. The party advocates strengthening competence supply, developing working methods, collaborating between competencies, and using new technology to free up time for staff.

A good life in Dalarna is about participation in family, work, and society, where hearing plays a central role in quality of life. Jarl stresses that care must develop in pace with people's needs to provide security throughout the region.

Being able to hear one's grandchildren laugh, participate in conversations around the dinner table, or follow a meeting at work. For those living with hearing impairment, it's not about small things; it's about participation, security, and quality of life.

(Sofia Jarl, Dala-Demokraten)

Relaterede artikler

Diverse foreign-born caregivers supporting elderly patients in a Swedish care facility, with chart showing their growing role in welfare work.
Billede genereret af AI

Welfare increasingly carried by foreign-born workers

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Immigrant labor is shouldering an ever-larger share of Sweden's welfare system, especially in elderly care. A report from Sweden's Municipalities and Regions (SKR) shows a sharp rise in foreign-born municipal and regional employees over the past decade. The proportion has increased from 13 to 22 percent in municipalities and from 14 to 20 percent in regions.

Region Dalarna has decided to develop an action plan to improve the work environment amid shortages of care places, sick leaves, and low staff satisfaction. Regional councilor Sebastian Karlberg (S) stresses the need for staff involvement to resolve these issues.

Rapporteret af AI

Cecilia Anderssén transitions from interim to permanent communications director at Region Dalarna. She will assume the role on April 1, 2026. Anderssén expresses gladness over the continued trust.

Uppsala municipality begins nominations for its annual care award, honoring employees in social services and health and care sectors. The prize is awarded by the social committee, care committee, and elderly committee to those who enhance the quality of life for Uppsala residents. Nominations are accepted from March 2 to 22, 2026.

Rapporteret af AI

Falun faces a shortage of senior apartments, but the situation may improve next year. Kopparstaden is constructing more safe and accessible homes for the elderly at a cost of at least 35 million kronor.

Regeringen annoncerer, at Sverige vil sende sundhedspersonale til Mellemøsten på grund af mange strandede svensker i området. Personalet vil styrke det svenske krisehold i De Forenede Arabiske Emirater. Sundhedsminister Elisabet Lann (KD) understreger behovet for at vurdere og imødekomme medicinske behov på stedet.

Rapporteret af AI

Justitieombudsmannen har fremsat skarp kritik mod voksenpsykiatrien på Sahlgrenska Universitetssykehus i Göteborg efter besøg på fem afdelinger. Patienter sover i korridorer, og der sker gentagne tvangsmedicineringer, hvilket vækker bekymring. Politikere kræver tiltag, og Moderaterne foreslår en krisekommission for regionens psykiatri.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis