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Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: That is not a quality assured service. We cannot roll out the service on this basis. It would make absolutely no sense to do so.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: Eighty per cent of the marks were for quality and turnaround and 20%, one fifth, were for price.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: I am not familiar with the details of the individual bidders. It would be improper of me to interfere in a tender process. Legal issues aside, it would be highly irregular.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: Deputy Reilly would be the first person to stand up in this House and complain if I were ever to interfere with the tender process.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: I do not do that. The screening service will equally confirm that when they are rolling out BreastCheck I do not tell them which county is next. That is purely a matter for them. I tell them only to move on as quickly as possible.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: I do not interfere in operational issues which are the responsibility of other people.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: I am not washing my hands of it: I am defending what they have done because I have total confidence in them, unlike Deputy Reilly. Deputy Reilly is scaring 2,000 women whose lives hang in the balance, which is highly irresponsible.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: That has not been verified by anybody.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: Yes, I do.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: I have a lot to do with it, Deputy. My obligation is to ensure there is in place a screening programme and to get Government backing for it. This means I must obtain resources to allow the screening service to recruit staff, roll out the programme and to pay for cytology services and smear testing. It is also my responsibility to ensure the service being rolled out is quality assured and...

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: I could not interfere when the preferred bidder won the contract on the basis of quality and turnaround time. As regards turnaround times, the laboratory must turnaround a result within ten days of receipt of a smear. This is necessary to facilitate the woman receiving a result within four weeks. This is as recommended in the standards and is not inconsistent with Dr. McGoogan's report...

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: There is plenty of work in the laboratories at Our Lady's Hospital for Sick Children in Crumlin and everywhere else.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: There is plenty of work in the laboratories.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: That is what the Royal College of Physicians in Ireland had to say. They are the experts in pathology. I have listened to them and to the independent experts made available to the cancer screening service. It has no vested interest except to put in place the best service for the women of Ireland.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: Of course we want to have quality-assured laboratory facilities in Ireland. Among the recommendations in the McGoogan report, which has been quoted here this morning, is the need to rationalise our laboratory services. When I was in British Columbia two years ago as part of the advanced preparation of the cancer control programme, I noted that a laboratory there dealt with 600,000 smear...

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: The Irish Medical Journal has not published articles about comparing this data and Deputy Reilly knows that. In relation to St. Luke's——

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: Comparing us with the US? The same study? The Deputy is not comparing like with like. He is talking about apples and oranges.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: Deputy Reilly is talking about different things. It is like last week when Deputy Reilly——

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: It is like the data last week, which Deputy Reilly got wrong.

Cancer Screening Programme: Statements (29 May 2008)

Mary Harney: Some 39 women underwent breast surgery in Mayo. There were over 80 patients dealt with, some of whom had fine-needle aspirations. They did not have surgery.

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