Arbeidsmiljøverket forbyr uautorisert overtid for leger

Det svenske Arbeidsmiljøverket har nedlagt forbud mot uautorisert overtid for leger i Region Dalarna. Regionen anker et gebyr på én million svenske kroner.

Beslutningen følger et varsel fra hovedverneombud Henrik Zetterberg om overtidsituasjonen. Han uttrykker skuffelse over regionens respons.

"Selvfølgelig synes vi det er uheldig at regionen velger å kjempe mot Arbeidsmiljøverket angående gebyrbeløpet for forbudet", sier Zetterberg.

Han legger til at de heller ville sett at regionen arbeidet mer intensivt med å overholde reglene.

Relaterte artikler

Åsa Dedering packing her office as she steps down as healthcare director in Region Dalarna on July 6.
Bilde generert av AI

Åsa Dedering steps down as health care director in Region Dalarna

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI

Åsa Dedering is leaving her role as health care director in Region Dalarna on 6 July. The decision was made at her own request after about five years in the post.

The Swedish Work Environment Authority has ruled that overtime among doctors in Region Dalarna is too high. The region has been prohibited from allowing it to continue and risks fines if it fails to comply.

Rapportert av AI

The Swedish Work Environment Authority has banned Region Dalarna from allowing doctors to work more overtime than the law permits. The decision follows more than 1000 hours of unauthorized overtime logged over just over three months.

A nurse has been convicted by Örebro District Court for accessing relatives' medical records without authorization. The breaches, discovered in 2024, involved up to 90 unauthorized lookups spanning several years.

Rapportert av AI

A locum doctor in his 60s from a southern Swedish city has lost his medical license after being deemed grossly incompetent. The doctor has worked at a primary care center in Dalarna, among other places. Hälso- och sjukvårdens ansvarsnämnd (HSAN) states that he posed a risk to patient safety.

Several restaurants in Mora, Orsa, Älvdalen and Malung-Sälen have been exposed for hiring people without work permits.

Rapportert av AI

A new report shows that 72 percent of home care staff in Sweden have considered leaving their jobs. In Uppsala, 54 people left home care services in 2025, and politicians from SD and MP have differing proposals to improve the situation.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis