Tag: Department of Health

  • National Maternity Hospital saga continues

    National Maternity Hospital saga continues

    With the plans for the new National Maternity Hospital swaddled in controversy, Hannah Lemass examines the reasons behind the row

     

    Plans for the new National Maternity Hospital (NMH) may be in jeopardy as the board of St Vincent’s Hospital will review the project amid ongoing criticism.

    The plans have faced controversy since it was announced that the St. Vincent’s Hospital Group (SVHG) would have ownership of the new NMH.

    The Sisters of Charity are the largest shareholder in the SVHG and will, therefore, be the owners of the new €300 million building.

     

    The planned site for the new National Maternity Hospital, St. Vincent’s University Campus, image Hannah Lemass

    Protest

    Demonstrations took place outside of maternity hospitals nationwide last weekend.

    The first protest occurred on Thursday 20 April.

    The crowd which included representatives from Parents for Choice and Midwives for Choice gathered outside the Department of Health headquarters on Poolbeg street in Dublin’s city centre.

    The lunchtime demonstration was organised by Workers’ Party Councillor Éilis Ryan.

    She criticised Minister for Health Simon Harris for tweeting on the issue of the new NMH rather than actively engaging in negotiations.

    “We would prefer if you actually got involved in the negotiations and didn’t  leave it up to the doctors to have to come out and make public statements about what kind of healthcare we should be having in this country.

    It’s a minister’s responsibility to take back control of healthcare from the church, put it into medical hands and make sure they are the ones making the decisions”.

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    “It’s a slap in the face to the women of Ireland” -Robyn, a protester at the Department of Health, image by Hannah Lemass

     

    Religious institution or independent hospital

    “As technology allows us to provide better and better medical care we’re going to have more and more procedures and treatments that the church rejects… the delay that I don’t want is when some form of new stem cell treatment is introduced, the board of the new NMH will have to have months-long negotiations about whether or not they approve it,” Councillor Ryan said. 

    Critics are fearful that having a religious order as owners will impede patient access to medical procedures that the church does not approve of, such as abortion and fertility treatments.

    Former master of the NMH Dr Peter Boylan has been very vocal in his criticism of the plan for the new hospital’s ownership

    “Hospitals on land owned by the Catholic Church are obliged to follow Catholic teaching and Canon Law on medical practices and procedures,” he said on Newstalk’s Pat Kenny Show.

    “To believe the new National Maternity Hospital will be the only hospital in the world owned by a Catholic congregation to permit serialisation, IVF, abortion, gender reassignment surgery and any other procedures prohibited by the Church is naive and delusional,” he added.

     

     

    He was concerned when Sister Agnes Reynolds of the Sisters of Charity  and sitting member of the SVHG board – did not directly comment on the influence the congregation will have at the new NMH.

    When asked by The Irish Times what influence the Sisters of Charity would have she said that she “can’t make a judgment on that.”

    “What she probably means is that we can’t make a judgment on that now, but wait until the hospital is built and then we will make a judgement call,” Dr Boylan said on Morning Ireland.

    Acting Deputy Chairman Nicholas Kearns requested that Dr Boylan resign due to his “public intervention to criticise and oppose the overwhelming majority decision of the Board.”

     

    Initially, Dr Boylan said he would not resign. However, on Newstalk’s Pat Kenny Show, he revealed that he had in fact submitted a letter of resignation.

    “I can no longer remain the member of a board which is so blind to the consequences of its decision to transfer sole ownership of the hospital to the religious Sisters of Charity and so deaf to the disquiet of the public which it serves,” he wrote in his letter of resignation.

    Minister Harris’s tweeted that the state will hold a golden share in the ownership of the hospital that will prevent the church from having any power to deny treatment.

     

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    Former Magdalene Laundry run by the Sisters of Charity in Donnybrook Dublin, image by Hannah Lemass

     

    On RTÉ’s Today With Sean O’Rourke, current Master of Holles Street Hospital Dr Rhona Mahony said that any suggestion the new hospital will be run by nuns or under a Catholic ethos is not true.

    She said that when the NMH moves, it will be an independent hospital with its own independent board “dedicated solely to the provision of gynaecological, maternity and neonatal service.”

    The agreement between SVHG and the NMH over the operation of the New Maternity Hospital, as mediated by Kieran Mulvey, was made public on 25 April.

    The 25-page document submitted to Simon Harris outlined that the hospital will be operated as a new company officially named The National Maternity Hospital at Elm Park DAC and the SVHG will be the sole owner.

     

    The first of several nationwide demonstrations was held on 20 April outside the Department of Health, image by Hannah Lemass

     

    The report also states that “the parties [the SVHG and the NMH] are agreed that the creation of a special golden share in the DAC is the best mechanism to provide legal protection to the inviolability of the “Reserved Powers” arrangement.”

    These “Reserved Powers” include:

    “a) Clinical and operational independence in the provision of maternity, gynaecology, obstetrics and neonatal services (without religious, ethnic or other distinction) in the hospital at Elm Park, Dublin…

    b)Control, utilise and protect all financial and budgetary matters as they relate to The National Maternity Hospital at Elm Park DAC (limited by shares)”.

     

     

    The Board

    The board of directors at the new NMH will be made up four directors nominated by the SVHG, four nominated by the current NMH, and one independent international expert in Obstetrics and Gynaecology.

    Deputy Chairman of Holles Street Nicholas Kearns wrote in The Irish Times on 26 April that the new hospital “will operate in accordance with the law of the land, not canon law – just as it does now. It will have no religious ethos”.

    He also explained that the hospital, which will take about five years to build, will have a ministerial lien which will prevent the Sisters of Charity from being able to borrow against or sell the property.

    The City report on the National Maternity Hospital, video by Hannah Lemass

    He also said that here is no alternative for the new NMH and that “women will benefit greatly from closer proximity to an acute adult site.”

    They have been looking for a new NMH since 1998. He described the current Holles Street location as “dilapidated, antiquated building that is not fit for purpose”

     

    Petition

    An online petition started by UCD postgraduate student Denise Kiernan has over 100,000 signatures.

    The petition calls for the prevention of the Sisters of Charity from becoming ‘sole owners’ of the hospital, for a formal apology from Sisters of Charity and that they pay their share of the redress scheme.

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    National Maternity Hospital petition (screen shot, May 1st, 2017), by Hannah Lemass

    Denise, who is currently taking part in a work placement at Welcome to Justice for Magdalenes, told The City that “we need to stand in solidarity with those who have faced abuse at the hands of religious institutions”.

    With no end in sight for this saga, it seems that we will have to wait a bit longer for the already overdue state of the art maternity services that the country requires.

     

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    Featured image by Hannah Lemass

     

     

  • Cosmetic surgery to continue to be unregulated into the new year

    Cosmetic surgery to continue to be unregulated into the new year

    Ireland is unlikely to have statutory regulations on cosmetic procedures in place by the end of the year, despite the Department of Health identifying cosmetic surgery as “one of their priority areas”.

    Although earlier reports stated that the Department of Health aimed to have legislative proposals ready for the Health Minister’s consideration by the end of the year, a representative of the Department avoided giving a specific answer when questioned by thecity.ie, saying it “should be finalised in the near future”.

    President of the Irish Association of Plastic Surgeons, Patricia Eadie, who has been campaigning for regulation of cosmetic procedures for nearly a decade explained what the cosmetic industry is lacking is “safe treatment of patients, done by fully qualified surgeons who are on the Specialist Register of the Irish Medical Council in appropriate facilities”.

    Eadie said “I can remember giving a presentation [petitioning for regulation] to the Minister for Health Mary Harney 7 or 8 years ago, and many more senior colleagues were campaigning before me.

    “To enact legislation in this country is often a long, drawn out process and unless there is a ‘crisis’ or specific champion for a cause, then a lot seems to get put on a long finger.”

    The dangers of cosmetic surgery came to the forefront of media attention recently when an estimated 1,900 Irish women were given breast implants manufactured by the French company Poly Implant Prothese which were filled with non-medical grade silicone that were unfit for human use.

    According to the Irish Medical Times, over 200 (11%) of Irish women who received PIP implants reported rupturing. The abnormally high rupture rates resulted in anxiety and panic from many of the Irish patients who received implants.

    South-Dublin based GP Elva Dalton commented on the current situation regarding the cosmetic industry:

    “There are a number of issues with the cosmetic industry at the moment. First of all any doctor can call themselves a cosmetic surgeon without formal qualifications, training or experience. Likewise, anyone can open a cosmetic clinic as there are no standards to be adhered to on the facilities and substances used”, she said.

    “Another concern is that cosmetic surgery is unnecessary surgery. Usually when a patient undergoes invasive surgery they are referred to a surgeon by their doctor but the nature of the cosmetics industry means that consumers pick their own surgeons through word of mouth or a glossy unrealistic advertisement.”

  • Proposed transition to opt-out system for organ donation

    Proposed transition to opt-out system for organ donation

    A joint Oireachtas Committee, chaired by Mr. Jerry Buttimer, has called for a change in the way Irish citizens are asked to donate our organs, in the hope more organs will be donated.

    An opt-out system, instead of an opt-in system, would increase the number of organ donors, according to Mr. Buttimer.

    In this way, Irish residents would automatically become donors unless they specifically choose not to, by opting out.

    Under the present system, organ donors opt-in by choosing to donate their organs by carrying an organ donor card.

    Nevertheless, the Irish Kidney Association does not think an opt-out system will increase donor numbers and would prefer a change in the way organs are obtained.

    It expected the public consultation process, initiated by the Department of Health, to debate whether an opt-out system should or should not be introduced, and explained this in their submission.

    We have been asking Irish people to donate organs for the past 49 years, said the Irish Kidney Association, and the proposal now is to tell them they can object to organ donation.

    A “public awareness campaign for an opt-out system is a much harder proposition to sell to the public, than the informed consent system” and needs careful consideration, it added.

    In 2012, three Dublin hospitals carried out 239 organ transplants – 163 kidney, 50 liver, 14 lung, 10 heart and two pancreas.

    The total number of donors was 78 deceased and 32 live donors. Notwithstanding, the number of patients on the transplant list was 563, an increase of 35 on 2011 figures

    Video

    Reporter: Anne Stewart

    Camera: Kay Cairns

    Production: Jonathan Crean