Abstract

Slovenia is a small country in the Southeastern part of Europe with a Gross Domestic Product slightly below the European average. There are eleven board-certified thoracic surgeons and four residents, dealing with roughly 2,500 thoracic cases per year. Thoracic Surgery in Slovenia is a challenging surgical specialty covering a wide range of problems such as lung cancer and other thoracic cancers, diseases of the esophagus, airway surgery, interventional endoscopy, pediatric thoracic surgery, lung transplantation, and even some nonthoracic problems such as surgery of the thyroid and parathyroid. Slovenian patients certainly enjoy the privilege of having free access to almost everything contemporary thoracic surgery can offer, including the most complex and least invasive procedures. In 2008 Slovenia was the first country in South-eastern Europe to adopt video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) to treat lung cancer and other malignant diseases. It has also played an essential role in spreading the technique to neighboring countries. Slovenia also has a very successful lung transplantation program. On the other hand, most of the infrastructure is outdated, with both university hospitals built in the 1970s unable to provide a very comfortable hospital stay or increase their operating room capacities to meet the increased demand, thus waiting times for procedures of lesser priority, such as laparoscopic fundoplication and thyroidectomy became unacceptably long.

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