Colective
was a popular nightclub in Bucharest, Romania. In 2015, a fire broke
out during a band performance killing 27 people and injuring 180.
The public protests that erupted
over the lack of fire exits in the club led to the resignations of
government officials, including the Minister of Health. Within four
months of the fire, 37 of the critically burned died, not as originally
thought from the burns they suffered, but from
hospital- acquired infections.
The feature documentary follows Catalin Tolontan, an investigative journalist at a sports
newspaper and his team as they track down the cause of the fatal
infections. They are
aided by doctors from the hospital who come forward to voice their
suspicion that the infection control agents used by the hospital were
diluted to the point of being ineffective. The journalists bring
samples to a lab which verifies that the agents were diluted
to 10% of their effective strength. The owner of the company supplying
the agents had been engaged in the practice for years.
We
hear tragic stories from parents whose children died, prevented by
“communication errors” from having them transferred to other, better
equipped burn units in other
European countries. And we meet the survivors, among them,
Tedy Ursuleanu, who, despite her disfigurement, bravely poses for photographs for an exhibit about the
event. The film returns to Tedy at several moments--- she is a reminder
of the human tragedy that has caused so much
suffering. And
we listen to the despair of a doctor who says, “We’re doctors; but we
are no longer human. All that matters is money,” as she describes how
politics, bribery
and greed have taken over the health system and made patients’ lives
expendable.
This
is a story without a happy ending. Vlad Voiculescu, the newly
appointed health minister who previously worked in patient advocacy
tries to reform the system
and install safeguards against hospital procedures that fall short of
accreditation requirements. But the system proves too strong. This
time political corruption wins over people’s health.