Seanad debates

Thursday, 29 September 2011

Hospital Services

 

1:00 pm

Photo of Kathryn ReillyKathryn Reilly (Sinn Fein)

I welcome the Minister of State to the House for this Adjournment matter. The Minister for Health recently confirmed that there will be a reduction in the opening hours of the minor injuries unit in Monaghan General Hospital to an eight hour, five day service to take effect from 1 November. Essentially, minor injuries will only be dealt with in Monaghan during business hours. Who knew that medical injuries had business hours and could be dealt with in that way? The reduction in hours for the minor injuries unit is a serious and life-threatening matter and it could be dealt with by the Fine Gael and Labour Party Government if there was a strong political will to do so.

The stripping of services from Monaghan General Hospital will have a massive knock-on effect on Cavan General Hospital and Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda. These hospitals are already unable to cope with the demands currently made on them. Every day we hear about hospital overcrowding with patients on trolleys, chairs and even on the floors of hospitals throughout the State. In addition to these service cuts and the centralisation of services at Cavan and Drogheda, there are ongoing cuts in health spending and the embargo on recruitment in the health services. Front-line staff in Cavan, like those in Monaghan, Drogheda and Dundalk, are doing their best in the face of insufficient resources and, indeed, poor planning by the HSE and the last Government. Does the Minister, Deputy James Reilly, support his party's local councillors and some of his party's Deputies in the north-east region of Cavan, Monaghan and Louth who have opposed the transformation agenda?

The decision to reduce this unit's hours is more about saving money for the Government than about patient care and safety. We are told the annual savings from the reduction will be approximately €400,000. What about the people who cannot travel to other hospitals outside these hours, the people who are living on the breadline and who are struggling to survive? What about those who have a minor injury but who cannot arrange a lift to a hospital further away in Cavan and Louth? The roads linking Cavan, Monaghan and Louth are not exactly the best. What about the overcrowded accident and emergency departments where seriously ill people are already waiting for hours to be seen? Is it prudent to reduce the hours of the minor injuries unit? It means that outside these hours other hospital services will be flooded with minor injuries that could have been dealt with in a more timely and efficient manner.

We should consider how the axe fell in this case. The current Minister for Health promised the people of Monaghan before the election that there would not be a reduction in hours. Post-election, however, the axe was sharpened and the services in Monaghan General Hospital have been hatcheted once more. In a reply to a parliamentary question from my colleague, Deputy Ó Caoláin, the Minister said: "Underlying the health service is the principle that the patient should be treated at the lowest level of complexity that is safe, timely, efficient and as near to home as possible." Now, however, the Minister is presiding over a reduction in hours for the most basic and closest services for the people of Monaghan.

Has any consideration been given to the knock-on effects and to the effects of reducing the hours of a service for the lowest level of complexity at Monaghan General Hospital? Finally, will the Minister make a commitment to revisit the failed hospital configuration in the north east, specifically as it affects Monaghan General Hospital, while recognising the knock-on effects on Cavan General Hospital and the impact of the loss of services at both Louth County Hospital and Our Lady's Hospital in Navan?

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