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Introduction
Bulgaria is a small (110,994 sq km) country in Eastern Europe on the Balkan Mountains, bordered in the east by the Black sea. Bulgarian residents enjoy the marvelous nature and the continental climate. The major cities are Plovdiv, Varna, Burgas and Sofia, the capital. Founded in the year 681, Bulgaria served as the major participant in the Balkan political life for seven centuries. Then, the Ottoman Empire ruled Bulgaria for nearly 500 years. In 1908, Bulgaria proclaimed its independence. After the World Wars, the former USSR influenced politics in Bulgaria until the late 1980’s. Finally, the National Assembly ratified a democratic constitution in 1991. This was the first step for Bulgaria to have access to countries behind the Iron Wall. Bulgaria plans to join the European Union in 2007. According to 2002 statistical figures, 7.6 million people call Bulgaria home. Bulgarians are very tolerant of the nationality, religion or race of the others. In many villages and towns, Christians, Muslims and Jews live door to door in peace and harmony. For instance, the center of Sofia holds a mosque, a synagogue, a catholic and an orthodox church. While the economic status of its residents might be low, Bulgarian’s are naturally friendly and talented. Additionally, as in all the other countries, Bulgaria faces some economical, political and crime problems. One such problem is health care and the recognition of CF as a disease.
There are 170 registered CF patients in Bulgaria with only 30 patients over the age of 18 years of age. Patient ages range from 2 months to 35 years. The average life expectancy for a CF person in Bulgaria is about 15 years. The Bulgarian CF Clinic Medical Treatment in Bulgaria
The doctor teams are well grounded in the therapeutically schemes practiced in the European CF centers, but their application is frustrated by the lack of some medicines—such as suitable intravenous and inhalatory antibiotics. In fact, there are currently no inhalatory antibiotics in Bulgaria. Unfortunately, the low social status of the most CF families prevents patients from being treated with the high cost medications available such as—inhalatory bronchodilatators, mucolitics, drugs for liver protection, polyvitamins and multivitamin complexes.
The CF Association works in a close collaboration with
the laboratory of molecular pathology in the Medical University Sofia
where over 85% of the patients have received DNA-analysis. An additional
100 families used prenatal diagnose. The resources for these tests were
supplied by the National programme for congenital anomalies and inherited
diseases prophylaxis. There are more than 30 types of mutations identified
in the patients with some of them described for the first time in Europe.
One hundred percent our CF patients from the gypsy population have the
The Bulgarian CF Association Some curious facts about Bulgaria:
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