In the Krasnoyarsk Territory, 580 million rubles will be spent on modernizing clinics

In the Krasnoyarsk Territory, about 580 million rubles will be allocated for the modernization of primary healthcare. These funds are provided for in the regional budget for 2026 and the planning period 2027-2028, which today, December 4, was adopted in the second reading in the Legislative Assembly.
Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Krasnoyarsk Territory – Minister of Finance of the Territory Vladimir Bakhar reminded the deputies of parliament that these are funds from the federal budget, which, at the proposal of the relevant committee, will be allocated to the regional state program “Health Development”. In addition to modernizing clinics, funds will be used for the construction of the Minusinsk interdistrict hospital (more than 880 million rubles) and provision of medicines (280 million rubles). Also, over 3 years, about 100 million rubles will be spent on equipping children's clinics with mobile equipment for on-site medical examinations. Another more than 330 million rubles will be spent on eliminating the regulations of supervisory authorities. In addition, it is planned to purchase 28 medical vehicles.
In 2026, for the first time in the region, funds will be allocated to vaccinate girls 9-12 years old with a family history against the human papillomavirus. This infection affects the reproductive health of expectant mothers.
Also, the region will allocate money so that one of the parents can stay in a hospital with a child with type 1 diabetes for free, and accommodation will be organized for nonresident residents during examination and treatment at the Krasnoyarsk Regional Clinical Oncology Center named after A.I. Kryzhanovsky. The task remains to increase the bed capacity of psychoneurological boarding schools; to solve this problem, it is planned to purchase modular buildings. It is also necessary to expand regional health care institutions that provide infectious disease care.
After a discussion in which Alena Mironova, Irina Subocheva, Ekaterina Udelko, Irina Ivanova, Alexander Ratakhin, Andrey Gayulsky, Alexander Novikov took part, the committee approved amendments to the main financial document of the region.
Larisa Akhmedova, deputy director of the Territorial Compulsory Medical Insurance Fund of the region, spoke at the committee meeting about new approaches to paying for medical care and forming a state guarantee program. New priority areas of medical care in the region will be telemedicine consultations, which will be actively implemented to exchange experience, treat and monitor the health of patients. For the first time, the state guarantee program will include kidney transplantation and the use of modern medical decision support systems, including those using artificial intelligence.
A significant issue was the results and plans for the medical examination. In 2025, the volume of inspections amounted to 85%, therefore, due to failure to achieve planned indicators, about 1 billion rubles will be returned to the federal budget. In 2026, according to the plan, about 1.2 million residents of the region should undergo medical examination. To reach a larger number of people, various formats are used, including mobile mobile medical teams and examinations in organized teams. Information work will continue with employers and patients about the need to be attentive to their health.
In 2026, patients with limited mobility will be able to undergo medical examination during a three-day hospital stay. It is assumed that medical institutions will deliver patients for examination. Next year, a similar system will finance preventive examinations and clinical observation, treatment of patients with hepatitis C, cardiovascular surgery, and medical rehabilitation.
Ilya Zaitsev, Chairman of the Committee on Health Protection and Social Policy, emphasized: “Medicine is rapidly developing along with information technology, but its main component, despite technical improvements, must remain a personalized approach to the patient. Sometimes the formal attitude towards medical examinations, which is signaled by the residents of the region, cancels out the efforts of the entire system.”




