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Elia Martínez, president of the Spanish Society of Palliative Care, points out that up to forty percent of patients who need them do not receive them. Spain suffers from a "very clear underfunding and very high deficiency" in the resources to carry out the palliative care that patients require, according to Elia Martínez, president of the Spanish Society of Palliative Care. Thus, some 180,000 people require palliative care in Spain as a whole, but up to forty percent will not be able to receive it due to lack of resources. Canary Islands, one of the worst communities In the case of the Canary Islands, up to five times more resources are required than those available, which makes it one of the most deficient communities, despite having implemented a strategic plan. He points out that in no community are minimum levels reached that make us comparable with other European countries. In the case of Spain, the transfer of powers in healthcare places patients in a more vulnerable situation, due to unequal access to resources.
Alberto Suárez, systems administrator at edataconsulting, highlights the need to increase training and continuous education in the face of cybersecurity threats. On February 29, the Marine Maritime Innovation Center located in the Puerto Las Palmas Foundation Building will host the free training course Safe Digitalization of the Work Environment (Zero Paper Policy), taught under Europe Mobile Number List the framework of the Cybercan project and financed by the Canarian Agency for Research, Innovation and Information Society (ACIISI). Alberto Suárez, course teacher and edataconsulting systems administrator, points out the importance of increasing training and continuous training in the face of cybersecurity threats, once digitalization processes have been extended to very sensitive social processes, as is the case of healthcare. Secure and efficient digitization In this course, participating companies will be able to learn how to digitize their work processes safely and efficiently, eliminating the use of paper, with the consequent benefits in terms of cost savings, efficiency and sustainability.
Additionally, upon completion of the course, participants will receive a certificate of participation. CyberCan Project CyberCan ('Promoting cybersecurity in the Canary Islands') is aligned with the Digital Europe Program that identifies among its priorities the strengthening of cybersecurity, a key factor that is also present in the Canary Islands Digital Agenda 2025, a tool that establishes the roadmap to address the digital transformation of our economic and social ecosystem. This initiative promoted by the Government of the Canary Islands, through the Canary Islands Agency for Research, Innovation and Information Society (ACIISI), arises as a specific action of the Canary Islands Digital Innovation Center (CIDIHUB, for the acronym in English of Canary Islands). Digital Innovation Hub). CYBERCAN is a project sponsored by the Canary Islands Agency for Research, Innovation and Information Society (ACIISI), attached to the Ministry of Economy, Knowledge and Employment of the Government of the Canary Islands.
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