Schwesig warns of burdens from nursing reform plans

Manuela Schwesig, minister president of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, has criticized federal health minister Nina Warken's plans for nursing care reform. She sees them as shifting problems onto the weakest. DAK chief Andreas Storm also called for a reform moratorium.

Schwesig accused Warken of increasing pressure on those in need of care and their families. A proposal to reduce co-payments only after 18 months instead of 12 would help the fewest people affected, she told Bild newspaper.

The SPD politician called for an overall concept involving the federal government, states, municipalities and care facilities. “This is not a reform. This is shifting the problem at the expense of the weakest,” she stressed.

Storm warned of “irreparable damage” to the long-term care insurance. The proposals would lead to more care poverty and higher costs for municipalities, the DAK chief told the Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland. Warken had announced plans for financial security by mid-May, as the care insurance faces a shortfall of six billion euros next year.

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Nina Warken defending care insurance reform package at press conference
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Warken defends savings package for care insurance amid criticism

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Federal Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) has presented and defended her draft reform of the care insurance system. The package includes higher contributions and benefit restrictions to avert a looming deficit.

German Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) has defended her planned savings package, which includes higher financial burdens for nursing home residents. In an ntv show, she admitted imposing cuts on people and viewed the broad criticism as evidence of balance. The draft is set for the federal cabinet on April 29.

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Days before the planned cabinet decision, the SPD warns against overburdening insured individuals with Health Minister Nina Warken's savings package. The SPD demands more cuts from pharmaceutical companies and efficiency measures. The Greens have presented their own counter-concept.

Top representatives of Germany's black-red coalition from CDU, CSU and SPD concluded their two-day talks on energy prices and social-tax reforms late Sunday night at Villa Borsig near Berlin. No results were disclosed immediately. It remains unclear if announcements will follow on Monday.

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Following Chancellor Merz's announcement that the bill was practically ready, the German government finalized its health reform draft on April 28, targeting 16.3 billion euros in savings from 2027—down from an initial 19.6 billion—to address a 15.3 billion euro deficit at statutory health insurers. The Greens decry it as a burden on insured people and companies, while Health Minister Nina Warken calls it balanced. Cabinet approval is set for Wednesday.

Germany's black-red federal government aims to pass a package of reforms covering taxes, the labor market, pensions and bureaucracy reduction before the summer break. A further coalition committee meeting shortly before the parliamentary summer recess in early July is set to make the decisions. Chancellor Friedrich Merz will invite social partners to the chancellery in early June.

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The federal government agreed on a package of more than 30 reform measures on Wednesday evening. Chancellor Friedrich Merz presented it on Thursday.

 

 

 

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