logo
Concerns raised over lack of clarity on resumption of Laura Brennan HPV catch-up scheme

Concerns raised over lack of clarity on resumption of Laura Brennan HPV catch-up scheme

Irish Examiner21-05-2025
Serious concerns have been raised that the Government has "abandoned" its commitment to restart the Laura Brennan HPV catch-up programme.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin was unable to provide clarity around when such a programme, which would target thousands of young people who miss out on the vaccine each year, will be rolled out.
Campaigners have raised concerns around a backslide in uptake of the vaccine which can prevent a number of cancers, including cervical and throat cancer, and are urging the coalition to restart what was previously a highly successful catch-up programme.
Raising the issue in the Dáil, Roderic O'Gorman pointed out that the vaccination rates have been dropping since 2019, and around 16,000 young people now do not get it each year.
He said the programme for Government pledges to extend the Laura Brennan HPV catch-up vaccination programme to anyone under 25 who missed the original vaccination.
"I have been in touch with both the department of health and the HSE to find out when the new programme will run. No one has been able to give me a straight answer," he said.
They tell me how important the HPV vaccine is. I agree. They tell me they are going to run a distinct programme for minority groups. That is brilliant. However, no one can tell me when the Laura Brennan programme will run again.
"I am worried that they have decided not to do it and more importantly, the Irish Cancer Society is concerned that this scheme is not going to run again," the Green Party leader said.
Mr Martin said significant progress has been made in achieving the goal of eradicating HPV-related cancers through the vaccine.
"I will check with the minister for health in respect of the catch-up programme. I will ask the minister to revert back to the deputy in respect of it. It is a fair question to raise and I will follow it up."
Afterwards, Mr O'Gorman said he was "disappointed" that the Taoiseach could not provide an update on the status of the catch-up programme.
During the 2022/23 school year, 80% of girls and around 77% of boys received the HPV jab. However, this is down since the 2019/20 academic year — when 84.1% of girls and 81.5% of boys took up the vaccine.
Read More
Should we all consider getting vaccinated against HPV?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

HSE chief admits waiting lists for assessments for children with disabilities will get worse
HSE chief admits waiting lists for assessments for children with disabilities will get worse

The Journal

time2 hours ago

  • The Journal

HSE chief admits waiting lists for assessments for children with disabilities will get worse

THE HEAD OF the Health Service Executive (HSE) has said he is 'hugely' concerned at growing waiting lists for disabled children seeking vital health assessments, and admitted the crisis will get worse. Bernard Gloster acknowledged a 'significant challenge' in tackling the crisis, with more than 15,000 children with serious disabilities waiting to access their legal right to assessments. When asked if the crisis was 'going to get worse before it got better', Gloster said 'yes'. 'Until we get extra capacity and until we reform the legislation, we are going to be challenged,' the HSE chief said. 'It would be very wrong of me to say anything different to people across the country, it would be untruthful to do that,' he told reporters in Limerick. The HSE predicts that the children's assessment waiting lists will increase to beyond 25,000 by the end of this year. After meeting Cara Daramody, a fourteen year old campaigner for the rights of children with disabilities, Gloster pledged that the HSE will advertise tenders for assessments to the private clinicians, to try and tackle the problem. Prior to the meeting, Cara Darmody, accompanied by her father Mark Darmody, called out the government via the HSE for breaching current legislation requiring it to provide health and education needs assessments for children with disabilities. Ms Darmody said children had been left to 'rot' on the waiting lists and urged Gloster to act fast to rescue the waiting list backlog for the vital assessments. Ms Darmody, who led a 50-hour protest outside the Dail last month highlighting the crisis, said she gave Gloster 'crucial information that totally contradicts the myth that capacity has been reached in the system in relation to the number of psychologists available to assess autistic children'. She said that she also informed the HSE chief that she is aware of 'private' clinicians who have sought to help reduce assessment waiting lists but who have been delayed in doing so by bureaucracy. Bernard Gloster pictured with activist Cara Darmody and her father Mark. Brendan Gleeson Brendan Gleeson Ms Darmody claimed she knows of at least one private clinician who could have 'eradicated' the AON waiting list in her home county of Tipperary county over the last 12 months, by performing an additional 220 AONs, had they been given the opportunity. She said the clinician had applied for a HSE Assessment Tender last October, 'but only got confirmation a month ago' that they had been accepted. Ms Darmody questioned 'why in the middle of a national crisis did it take eight months', and she accused the government of not acting fast enough on the waiting lists. Advertisement Gloster said this evening he was 'taken aback' at the details presented to him by Cara Darmody and Mark Darmody. Commentating on the alleged eight-month wait for the provision of the assessment tender, Gloster said: 'I have to say, it can happen, we are a very big organisation and we have to have rules and systems, and they, by their nature, can become bureaucratic.' 'I'm the first to put my hands up and say, that's for us to do better.' 'I don't think that my own people are doing anything bad or wrong, but it is for us to better, we are paid public servants and Cara and her Dad are not.' Gloster said, going forward, he would try to 'tighten the timeline' on assessment tenders applications by the private sector. He acknowledged that 'in the short-term' the HSE required 'help' from the private system to help reduce the assessment waiting lists. 'In the next few weeks we are going to redesign the specification of private sector provision to help us provide assessment of need,' Gloster said. 'We are going to widely advertise and promote it, so that if there are suitably qualified clinicians who can conduct an assessment of need, and who are qualified and registered to do so, and are safe to do so, then there will be no issue with us using that additional capacity,' he said. 'Even if it possibly reduced the timeline for a couple of hundred (children), then it would be a really productive thing.' Gloster said: 'If you apply for an assessment of need, you are entitled to it in law, you should be able to get it.' The Limerick health service boss said other 'challenges' existed beyond the assessments, including timelines over children's access to 'therapeutic support and intervention'. 'The amount of therapists we have in Ireland that are available to us is limited, but the government are making some really good interventions to increase the supply,' he said. Gloster said that Cara and Mark Darmody's 'anecdotal evidence' of a possible reduction in the waiting lists may exist in the private system, their arguments to investigate it further was 'legitimate and appropriate'. Gloster acknowledged that it had been 'a while' since the HSE had 'updated' its 'framework' of assessment providers, 'so, therefore, there is nothing to loose and everything to gain' by investigating potential capacity in the private system. 'If (it is) proven that there is capacity out there that isn't being used, we'll be delighted that more that can be done, because it means that we can immediately enter into arrangements with professionals to buy additional services to support our own (services),' Mr Gloster said. Ms Darmody described their meeting as 'extremely successful'. 'I got what I wanted from the meeting, which was for Mr Gloster to look into the issue and to start looking for solutions nationally, and in my own county Tipperary, and possibly internationally,' Ms Darmody said. Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal

Cancer diagnoses could double by 2045 without urgent action, warns Irish Cancer Society
Cancer diagnoses could double by 2045 without urgent action, warns Irish Cancer Society

The Journal

time6 hours ago

  • The Journal

Cancer diagnoses could double by 2045 without urgent action, warns Irish Cancer Society

IF THE GOVERNMENT does not act urgently, the toll on people in Ireland as well as our health service will be 'immense', the Irish Cancer Society warned today. This is because, CEO Averil Power said, without such action, 'the number of people getting cancer in Ireland is expected to double by 2045″. The pre-budget submission of the charity called for Government to 'invest now to reduce the number of people getting cancer and ensure the best possible outcomes for those who do'. A key ask for Budget 2026 is for the National Cancer Control Programme to be allocated 'at least €20 million in new recurrent development funding'. A commitment to multi-annual funding was also emphasis, with Power saying this is needed 'to enable effective planning for future service growth'. 'Irish people are more likely to get – and die – from cancer in Ireland than in many other European countries,' Power said, citing the OECD/European Commission Country Cancer profile for Ireland. Ireland has the second highest rate of new cancer diagnoses in the EU, and the third highest cancer mortality rate in Western Europe. She said: These shocking statistics must serve as a wakeup call to Government. Delays in diagnosis and treatment 'are Ireland's biggest obstacle to improved cancer outcomes', according to Power. Among the budgetary asks, the Irish Cancer Society is looking for funding for the expansion of treatment facilities, investment to ensure timely diagnostic tests and an additional €30 million for new cancer medicines. New cancer diagnosis every three minutes Statistics provided by the Irish Cancer Society show that 44,000 people are now diagnosed with cancer in Ireland every year – one person every three minutes. Advertisement Over 220,000 are living beyond their cancer diagnosis. But people continue to wait for diagnostic tests, according to the charity. Up to 2,800 people are waiting more than four weeks for an urgent colonoscopy. At the end of 2024, over 190,000 were waiting over three months for a diagnostic scan such as an MRI, CT or ultrasound. Once diagnosed, delays in treatment are occuring. Investment to address this is listed as a priority action. Two in five people with lung cancer and three in ten people with breast cancer did not get their surgery within the recommended timeframe in 2023. Delays can affect a person's chance of surviving cancer as well as leading to great anxiety, according to the charity. It is also calling for funding of awareness campaigns 'on the addictive and harmful effects of nicotine products', including vapes and nicotine pouches, and for adequate funding of programmes that help smokers quit. Sunscreen dispensers in public places as well as funding to build structures to provide shade in playgrounds and schools are proposed. 'We deserve the best possible chance of surviving the disease,' Power said. 'Sadly, too many Irish people are not getting that at present.' — Have you been affected by delays in diagnosis and treatment of cancer? The Journal Investigates is examining this issue. Please get in touch with us by emailing investigates@ Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal

Almost €100m spent on companies that use HSE facilities and staff to cut waiting lists after hours
Almost €100m spent on companies that use HSE facilities and staff to cut waiting lists after hours

Irish Times

time6 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Almost €100m spent on companies that use HSE facilities and staff to cut waiting lists after hours

Close to €100 million has been spent in just over two-and-a-half years on engaging external companies that use HSE -owned facilities and equipment after normal working hours – in many cases employing existing health service staff – to reduce public waiting lists. A report for Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill , published on Tuesday night, reveals 83 serving or former health staff are acting as directors in 148 companies providing what are known as insourcing and outsourcing arrangements to reduce waiting lists. It says 23 of these company directors are serving HSE personnel. About 500,000 instances of care were provided from the beginning of 2023 to the first quarter of this year. . READ MORE At the same time more than 13 million instances of care were provided by the HSE during core working days. HSE chief executive Bernard Gloster , who drew up the report, is to tell an Oireachtas committee on Wednesday that the figures suggest that 'in waiting-list management we have developed an over-reliance on insourcing to supplement core activity'. 'Insourcing by its nature carries risks and having assessed these I have agreed with the Minister and the Department [of Health] the need to take a series of steps which firstly reduce those risks and increase safeguards and secondly which removes our dependency on insourcing,' he is expected to say. He is to say that the HSE has carried out a review covering a 27-month period, taking in 2023/2024 and the first quarter of this year, to identify the scale of the dependency the health service has on insourcing and on outsourcing. Mr Gloster will define insourcing as the practice of engaging external companies or third-party providers to deliver services often outside of normal working hours using HSE-owned facilities and equipment. 'In many cases, these providers may employ or subcontract staff who are already directly employed by the HSE, effectively re-engaging internal staff through a separate commercial arrangement, typically at premium rates,' he is expected to say. 'It is not the use of standard overtime within employment contract arrangements of existing staff, which is a different form of insourcing.' [ National Treatment Purchase Fund seeks assurances from all hospitals that rules of waiting-list schemes being followed ] Following a number of controversies over insourcing arrangements, in April the Minister asked the HSE to examine on a national basis the scale and dependency of the health service on the practice. Last September an HSE internal audit revealed that two companies which received more than €1.5 million between them in contracts awarded by University Hospital Limerick without a competitive procurement process were owned or part-owned by employees at the facility. In May an internal report drawn up within a hospital run by Children's Health Ireland said there were 'serious concerns about the prudent and beneficial management' of National Treatment Purchase Fund (NTPF) funding in relation to a series of clinics run by one consultant. Mr Gloster is expected to tell the Oireachtas Committee on Health that overall €1.1 billion was spent over the period between insourcing and outsourcing – which involves buying care from the private sector. Much work in this area is carried out by the NTPF. He will say about €830 million was spent between insourcing and outsourcing over the period in acute settings, with the bulk being spent on outsourcing arrangements. 'Within acute settings €739 million of the spend is outsourcing and this ranges from private hospital care to private ambulances to laboratory products. That is to say not all of the outsourcing is for waiting-list management,' he is to say 'Within acute settings between €71 million and €91 million appears to be insourcing.' The NTPF, which will receive about €230 million in exchequer funding this year, is expected to say about 30 per cent of its focus is on insourcing. It is to say it only makes payments in relation to specific named patients who have been on a public waiting list and then only on receipt of detailed invoices from public hospitals confirming that care is completed and the patient discharged. The NTPF is also expected to say payments are only made to hospitals and never to individual consultants or hospital staff members.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store