Abstract

The health sector in Greece is considered as one of the most vulnerable sectors with high levels of corruption and appears to be particularly problematic in the provision of health services and in medical supplies procurement processes carried out by public hospitals. Viewed from a systemic-structural perspective, corruption is examined as a phenomenon emerging from the interactions and interconnections between the organized structures of venture capital and the state apparatus. This paper argues that the COVID-19 crisis has produced a breeding ground for potential corruption practices and seem to intensify the unlawful practices especially in procurement processes. The state of exception and the implementation of emergency measures manufacture the conditions that permit the lack of transparency in the transactions between the health care system and the pharmaceutical industry. Applying an integrated theoretical model of state-corporate crime and critical health criminology and drawing on empirical qualitative research, this paper highlights the procurement corruption risks in the health sector during the pandemic era.

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