When a Health Official Insults Patients and Hides Behind Politics — Péter Takács, State Secretary for Health at Hungary’s Ministry of the Interior

Péter Takács, Hungary’s State Secretary for Health, crossed a line that should never be crossed in a European country.

Following a patient complaint, he did not show empathy, did not order an investigation, and did not take responsibility. Instead, he responded aggressively — then issued what was presented as an “apology,” which in reality:

  • accepted no responsibility,
  • showed no empathy,
  • violated professional standards,
  • and ended with a political attack.

According to former members of the Hungarian Medical Chamber’s ethics committee, this was not an apology by any professional definition

.

The trigger was a basic failure: heating did not work at Saint John Hospital. In such a situation, a health leader is expected to investigate, communicate transparently, assign responsibility, and act. None of this happened.

The most alarming part came at the end: a patient complaint was turned into a political smear. Under European norms, a health official does not politicize patient suffering — and certainly does not insult citizens.

This case goes far beyond one statement.
It exposes the communication culture of the Fidesz government:

  • no accountability,
  • constant deflection,
  • professional failure repackaged as political attack,
  • and a system that believes power grants the right to humiliate citizens.

Draw your own conclusions.
This was not a mistake.
This is the system.

English subtitles are available via the CC button.