O Public highlights this Wednesday, March 17th, that the SUS reform is already two years old but the problems persist: there are fewer repeated exams, but visits to the health center to resolve bureaucracy continue. The newspaper lists the advantages and disadvantages of the new SUS organization model highlighted by ULS managers, according to a study by the Health Regulatory Authority.
O News Journal says that two thirds of Portuguese people have life insurance but more have been. This newspaper says that there are more than 7.6 million people protected in Portugal by some type of life insurance, which includes protection in the event of death or use as an investment product.
O Morning Mail makes headlines with the 10 thousand euros pension of Mário Centeno, former governor of the Bank of Portugal, who is retiring at the age of 59.
O Business writes that Banco de Portugal consultants are all ready to retire. He recalls that governor Álvaro Santos Pereira signaled his desire to end this figure within the financial supervisor and says that Centeno’s reform would have been the first in a cycle of negotiations. Currently, there are five bank staff in that location.
In Diário de Notícias one of the highlights goes precisely to Centeno, who, in an interview, says that his future is still open. You can also read the news about a study by the European Union Agency on Drugs, according to which cocaine consumption is increasing in Portugal and across Europe, while ecstasy is falling sharply.

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