Petro questions health system's contracting model

President Gustavo Petro criticized Colombia's health system's contracting model, highlighting private clinics' high profits in 2024 while public hospitals face bankruptcy. In a post on social media platform X, the leader pointed out irregularities in resource allocation and ties to corruption networks.

Colombia's President Gustavo Petro voiced concerns about the health system's operations, zeroing in on the current contracting model. The critique stemmed from data on private clinics' financial performance in 2024, showing that 150 of them earned net profits of 5.22 trillion pesos.

In his X post, Petro stated: “150 private clinics obtained 5.22 trillion pesos in net profits in 2024”. The president argued that this contracting framework favors the private sector, allowing health resources to lead to the collapse of public hospitals rather than supporting them. “It is a contracting system where health resources let public hospitals go bankrupt first and foremost”, he wrote.

Furthermore, Petro alluded to problematic connections in the sector, noting that some private clinics have ties to owners of Health Promoting Entities (EPS) or corruption networks. These dynamics, according to the president, distort the system's operations and disproportionately benefit the private sector, while public health faces ongoing challenges.

The message ended with a pointed remark: “This is how they order the health system”. This statement fits into the context of reforms proposed by Petro's government to overhaul the health model, aiming for greater equity in resource distribution. No immediate responses from the mentioned entities have been reported, but the issue underscores persistent tensions in Colombia's healthcare sector.

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President Petro announces EPS liquidation impacting 12 million amid health service disruption fears and medication delay deaths.
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Petro orders liquidation of crisis-hit EPS without transition plan

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President Gustavo Petro announced the liquidation of several financially troubled EPS, impacting around 12 million users, amid warnings over the absence of a contingency plan. Regional officials and associations caution against service disruptions and massive transfers that could overload the system. Recent deaths from medication delays highlight existing failures.

President Gustavo Petro defended Colombia's transition to clean energies, stating that oil exploration contracts from the last decade have not found large amounts of oil. He insisted on lowering the real interest rate to boost the economy. He highlighted advances like investments in solar substations and potential exports.

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In the televised Council of Ministers, President Gustavo Petro Urrego stated that there is no chaos in Colombia's health system, citing a continuous reduction in under-5 child mortality rates during his administration. Health Minister Guillermo Alfonso Jaramillo presented figures showing a drop in malnutrition deaths, from 404 cases in 2022 to 160 in 2025.

In response to ongoing debates sparked by the recent registration of a promoter committee, President Gustavo Petro has reiterated he does not seek re-election—prohibited by Colombia's Constitution—and remains open to a civil society-driven Constituent Assembly to advance stalled social reforms.

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President Gustavo Petro explained on his X account that economic reactivation funds will not come from the national budget, but from new taxes. This comes amid Decree 0150 of 2026, declaring an economic, social, and ecological emergency in eight northern Colombian departments due to the climate crisis.

President Gustavo Petro posted on X that extreme poverty measures his administration's success and that it has lifted nearly four million Colombians out of it.

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President Gustavo Petro signed Decree 1390 of 2025 declaring a 30-day economic and social emergency in Colombia after the Congress sank the financing bill. The measure aims to raise funds to cover a $16.3 trillion deficit and ensure essential services like health. The announcement sparks legal and political debate, with reviews pending from the Constitutional Court and Congress.

 

 

 

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