Dáil debates

Thursday, 24 March 2005

 

Hospitals Building Programme.

3:00 pm

Photo of Seán PowerSeán Power (Kildare South, Fianna Fail)

I thank Deputy McGinley for raising this issue and welcome the opportunity to clarify the position on the development of services at Letterkenny General Hospital on behalf of the Minister for Health and Children.

The Deputy will be aware that the Health Act 2004 provided for the Health Service Executive, which was established on 1 January 2005. Under the Act, the executive has the responsibility to manage and deliver, or arrange to be delivered on its behalf, health and personal social services. This includes responsibility for the provision and development of services at Letterkenny General Hospital.

The Department of Health and Children is advised by the HSE that the increasing capacity pressures at Letterkenny have arisen both from the recruitment of additional consultants in recent years and as a consequence of advances in modern medicine which have resulted in greater life expectancy. The most recent consultant appointments to the hospital, including a consultant cardiologist, haematologist, oncologist, geriatrician and a consultant in respiratory medicine, have meant that more patients access more services locally. These developments are welcome but it is acknowledged that they have led to an increase in the local demand for services.

To assist the hospital in addressing the issue of capacity, the Department gave approval in 2003 to the HSE north-western area to proceed with the planning of an extension to the emergency medicine department at Letterkenny. The HSE north-western area appointed a design team to carry out an option appraisal-feasibility study to determine the preferred location for the facility on the hospital site. The study, which examined eight options, has been completed and is under consideration by the HSE. The proposal also includes the provision of two "shelled-out" floors over the emergency medicine department for the future provision of up to 70 beds.

The Minister has identified the delivery of emergency services as a priority area for attention. Many of the difficulties and delays experienced in emergency medicine departments reflect system-wide issues. It is, therefore, necessary to take a whole-system approach involving primary care, acute care, and sub-acute and community care in tackling the problems in emergency medicine departments.

In November 2004, the Minister announced additional funding of €70 million to implement a ten-point action plan to improve the delivery of emergency services. She has met senior management of the Health Service Executive and the Department is working closely with the HSE to ensure early implementation of these measures.

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