Dáil debates

Wednesday, 8 November 2006

 

Ambulance Service.

9:00 pm

Photo of Martin FerrisMartin Ferris (Kerry North, Sinn Fein)

I welcome the opportunity to raise the matter of a painful situation for a 63 year old man, Brendan, and his wife Karen. In January, Brendan was diagnosed with liver cancer and had two thirds of his liver removed. Prior to that, he and his wife worked stacking shelves in two supermarkets in Tralee. Their combined income put them above the qualifying amount for a medical card so they needed to take out medical insurance. In this instance, that was unfortunate for them.

Having two thirds of his liver removed necessitated ten weeks as a patient in St. Vincent's hospital in Dublin. His wife took leave and stayed with him in Dublin while he received chemotherapy. Until two months ago, he underwent 14 chemotherapy sessions during 28 weeks. Every two weeks, he and his wife travelled from Tralee to Dublin. Their financial situation was desperate and they got tremendous help from the area's community welfare officer, who provided Brendan with a medical card to help with some of the expenses. All their savings were exhausted a month ago and they have effectively been left destitute.

Brendan asked Kerry General Hospital whether it could possibly provide him and his family with a subsidy for their travel allowances. It would have amounted to approximately €62 and covered his wife's train fare and the cost of a taxi to St. Vincent's hospital. However, he was told that because he was a private patient, he did not qualify for the subsidy. Consequently, his last four trips to Dublin have involved his leaving Tralee on the early morning train, a four-hour journey to Heuston Station, taking a bus into part of the city, going the rest of the way in other forms of transport, getting his chemotherapy treatment and making the return journey.

The man is terminally ill. At best and if everything goes well, he has two or three years left; at worst, he has less than six months. He applied to Kerry General Hospital for assistance in travelling to St. Vincent's hospital once per fortnight, but the response, even on appeal, was that a public hospital cannot be seen to subsidise a private patient of St. Vincent's hospital. Brendan and Karen said that the hospital was wrong and that the intention when rolling out the travel assistance scheme was not to discriminate against public or private hospitals, but to provide assistance to those who need to travel to other hospitals for treatment. There was to be no distinction. Even more outrageous than a terminally ill man with little money being refused such basic assistance was the suggestion that he become a public patient as he had a medical card and the transport section would then help him.

In this situation, which I am sure is replicated in many instances elsewhere, someone who pays his taxes, works hard and gets VHI or other medical insurance is being penalised because he did not incur upon the State expenses when he could have done so. He could easily have got disability benefits and a medical card and gone public. It has been suggested that he go into a public hospital, take a bed, when there is a shortage of them, and incur an expense on the State, which he does not want to do because he has paid medical insurance. According to the Department of Social and Family Affairs and the HSE, it appears that he is to be penalised. He is caught in an awful dilemma.

Comments

No comments

Log in or join to post a public comment.