Dáil debates

Tuesday, 30 September 2025

Ceisteanna ó Cheannairí - Leaders' Questions

 

2:15 am

Photo of Ivana BacikIvana Bacik (Dublin Bay South, Labour)

Go raibh maith agat Ceann Comhairle. I ask that we step aside from the cheap political point scoring for a moment. I want to raise a very serious issue on which I think there is commonality across this House, which is children's health. Specifically, the issue of children who have been suffering with scoliosis and spina bifida who have been failed for far too long by this State. I welcome the announcement this week that an inquiry will be held into the care of these children. This followed a long-awaited meeting between the Tánaiste, the Minister for Health and the brave and tireless advocates Gillian and Stephen Morrison Sherratt. As we know, their son Harvey was born with spina bifida, hydrocephalus and developing scoliosis. Sadly, Harvey died in July this year at the age of nine, eight months after eventually having surgery, having waited years for his operation. I reiterate my deepest sympathies to his family. Deputy Sherlock and I have already done so in person. I commend his parents and the campaigners from other parent groups of children suffering with these conditions who have campaigned and given such powerful advocacy. Many of us will have heard Gillian speaking powerfully on "Morning Ireland" this morning, emphasising two important asks in respect of the inquiry.

The first is that it must be public and the second is that it must be statutory. The Taoiseach and the Government have three weeks now to do right by every child impacted. Nothing less than a statutory public inquiry will do because children are still facing long delays for surgery. In many cases their condition is deteriorating as they languish on a waiting list. We know other children have had unnecessary hip surgeries. None of us will forget the heartbreaking testimony we have heard from parents who spoke about having to listen to children wailing with pain through the night. Families cannot take any more false hope or promises on this.

We all know that, back in 2017, the Tánaiste, the Taoiseach's second in command, committed that no child would wait longer than four months for spinal surgery. Infamously and tragically, that promise came to nothing. We might, indeed, reflect on the fact a child who was ten years of age at the time that commitment was given would now be ageing out of the paediatric system. We have spoken before in this House about the failings at Children's Health Ireland, which are ongoing. Children with scoliosis and spina bifida, in particular, are paying a high price for the inability to deal with spinal surgery waiting lists. This has to be resolved for children who have already been failed, those in the system now and those who will have to wait in future.

The political system has not covered itself in glory on this. Gillian Sherratt says she still has not received answers as to why her son was removed from the urgent surgery list. The orphan report was never published, and nor were the Dickson report and the Nayagam report. As Deputy Sherlock has said, the Government needs to clarify the sequencing of these reports. Another thing to clarify is that back in April, the Taoiseach expressed confidence in Children's Health Ireland, even after a damning HIQA report was published, yet now we learn that CHI is being integrated into the HSE, as we had called for. I am asking the Taoiseach to clarify the following. First, will he commit that parents will have a genuine role in developing the terms of reference of this inquiry? Second, does he agree that it must be a statutory, public inquiry?

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