In the hospital this week, not because of physical infirmities, but for research purposes.

There is a technical uniqueness between Frankfurt and Darmstadt, we will report.

No, we don't mean the electrical overhead line for non-existent e-trucks over the A5, where there is a lot of construction activity.

The power line, which failed in years of field tests, is not dismantled as expected, but extended to Weiterstadt.

When we heard that, we almost ended up being an emergency room case after all.

Where does the money for such nonsense come from, who releases funds for it?

That will have to be clarified.

There is a hospital a few kilometers away.

Without being insulting and without being able to assess the economic circumstances more precisely, one can state: its structural condition is disgraceful.

Are resources in Germany flowing into the right objects?

As luck would have it, the manager is standing in the corridor and has just received mail from the Ministry of Health, which means she has a high temperature.

Since January 2020, the team around Jens Spahn and Karl Lauterbach have created 222 laws, ordinances, decrees with a direct or indirect effect on the clinics.

In the meantime, 23 percent of the clinic proceeds went on controller bureaucracy.

She had to expand medical controlling from one to five employees.

Doctors and nurses would have to spend a third of their working hours on documentation.

"We're drowning in bureaucracy," complains the director.

Brief cross-check with a registered doctor.

It's good for Lauterbach and Co. that the space for this comment ends here.