
‘Fear and distrust': why children's healthcare is in crisis
And that's before the not so little matter of the massive budgetary and time overruns that plague the unfinished national children's hospital.
The body tasked with overseeing the healthcare of the nation's children is Children's Health Ireland.
It was founded in 2019 and in just six years has faced a mounting number of controversies and scandals.
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Questions are now being asked about the ability of CHI to do its job.
And that's a job that will get all the more complicated when the children's hospitals, each with their own culture and way of doing things, have to merge under one roof when the new hospital opens.
CHI is funded by the HSE and answers to it, so what role does the State's healthcare body play in all this? And what is Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll McNeill going to do as CHI lurches from crisis to crisis?
Irish Times health correspondent Shauna Bowers explains.
Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Declan Conlon.
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RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
'Healthcare workers are starving to death,' Gaza rally hears
Healthcare workers led hundreds of demonstrators opposing the ongoing war in Gaza in a silent march through Dublin city centre. It was organised by Irish Healthcare Workers for Palestine, an informal group of more than 500 healthcare workers in Ireland. Dublin-based GP and Medical Director of Safetynet, Dr Angy Skuce, said it was their largest demonstration to date. She believes many were motivated to join today's silent protest, because people are now "watching the slow starvation of everybody in Gaza". "So for 20 months we have been watching our colleagues being bombed, shot at, abducted, killed, but now we are actually watching them in real time slowly starving to death," Dr Skuce said. "We're in regular contact with people over there, we're getting videos from doctors, nurses and ambulance staff over there, and over the last few months we've actually watched them get thinner and thinner and thinner," she added. "They are dying themselves and they are also trying to save people who are brought into their hospital, dying," Dr Skuce said. Among those leading the demonstration was Dr Ahmad Adjina, a GP in Templeogue in Dublin, who is originally from Gaza. "I have two cousins who are doctors, one is a surgeon in northern Gaza, another is in the south," Dr Adjina said, "whatever they can do, they do it". "If they had the equipment they would stay 24 hours working but they don't have that, and that's the issue," Dr Adjina said. "The other thing is they are moving from place to place to place to place, I don't know how they are surviving," he said. His wife Fatima Jabr is also from Gaza and she attended today's march along with their son. "It's getting worse and worse and worse every day," Ms Jabr said. "I just want to thank the Irish people, no words can say how grateful we are, honestly," Ms Jabr said, as she broke down in tears, "the support we have gotten from Irish people is beyond words". Demonstrators carried placards with the names and photos of some of Palestinian doctors that have been killed, while others highlighted the chronic shortages of basic medical supplies in Gaza, such as anesthetics and gauze. Medics also carried a stretcher with bandaged dolls through the streets, to represent the war's civilian child causalties. In silence, protesters began their march outside the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland on St Stephen's Green and made their way slowly and solemnly through an otherwise busy Grafton Street. They were met with spontaneous applause as they turned onto South William Street before walking past the Gaiety Theatre and St Stephen's Green Shopping Centre and returning to RSCI. There, Dr George Little, a consultant in emergency medicine, addressed the crowd. He told those gathered that healthcare workers had "a moral obligation, an ethical obligation and professional obligation to protect human rights". "In the last week we have begun to see the overt signs of starvation" in Gaza, Dr Little told RTÉ News. "I think that has a visceral response, particularly for Irish people, that's what it looks like, that's what forced starvation looks like."


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Healthcare workers stage Gaza protest march in Dublin
Healthcare workers led hundreds of demonstrators opposing the ongoing war in Gaza in a silent march through Dublin city centre. It was organised by Irish Healthcare Workers for Palestine, an informal group of more than 500 healthcare workers in Ireland. Dublin-based GP and Medical Director of Safetynet, Dr Angy Skuce, said it was their largest demonstration to date. She believes many were motivated to join today's silent protest, because people are now "watching the slow starvation of everybody in Gaza". "So for 20 months we have been watching our colleagues being bombed, shot at, abducted, killed, but now we are actually watching them in real time slowly starving to death," Dr Skuce said. "We're in regular contact with people over there, we're getting videos from doctors, nurses and ambulance staff over there, and over the last few months we've actually watched them get thinner and thinner and thinner," she added. "They are dying themselves and they are also trying to save people who are brought into their hospital, dying," Dr Skuce said. Among those leading the demonstration was Dr Ahmad Adjina, a GP in Templeogue in Dublin, who is originally from Gaza. "I have two cousins who are doctors, one is a surgeon in northern Gaza, another is in the south," Dr Adjina said, "whatever they can do, they do it". "If they had the equipment they would stay 24 hours working but they don't have that, and that's the issue," Dr Adjina said. "The other thing is they are moving from place to place to place to place, I don't know how they are surviving," he said. His wife Fatima Jabr is also from Gaza and she attended today's march along with their son. "It's getting worse and worse and worse every day," Ms Jabr said. "I just want to thank the Irish people, no words can say how grateful we are, honestly," Ms Jabr said, as she broke down in tears, "the support we have gotten from Irish people is beyond words". Demonstrators carried placards with the names and photos of some of Palestinian doctors that have been killed, while others highlighted the chronic shortages of basic medical supplies in Gaza, such as anesthetics and gauze. Medics also carried a stretcher with bandaged dolls through the streets, to represent the war's civilian child causalties. In silence, protesters began their march outside the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland on St Stephen's Green and made their way slowly and solemnly through an otherwise busy Grafton Street. They were met with spontaneous applause as they turned onto South William Street before walking passed the Gaiety Theatre and St Stephen's Green Shopping Centre and returning to RSCI. There, Dr George Little, a consultant in emergency medicine, addressed the crowd. He told those gathered that healthcare workers had "a moral obligation, an ethical obligation and professional obligation to protect human rights". "In the last week we have begun to see the overt signs of starvation" in Gaza, Dr Little told RTÉ News. "I think that has a visceral response, particularly for Irish people, that's what it looks like, that's what forced starvation looks like."


Irish Times
6 hours ago
- Irish Times
Simon Harris considers Gaza national day of solidarity
Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Harris is considering plans for Ireland to hold a national day of solidarity in support of the people of Gaza . Mr Harris said a proposal for a national day of solidarity was a 'sensible and a good idea'. The proposal was made by Michael Cush and appeared in the letters page of The Irish Times on Thursday. 'The Government has been brave and consistent in its condemnation of the atrocities in Gaza. But it has been frustrated, too,' Mr Cush wrote. 'But, together, the Government and the people might be much more influential. READ MORE 'If the Government were to call a national day of protest, making clear that it was a condemnation of atrocities in Gaza, not of Israel's right to self-determination or self-defence, the turnout would likely be enormous,' the letter said. In a post on his Instagram account on Saturday, Mr Harris shared the letter and said that the people of Ireland 'stand with the people of Palestine'. 'We stand for human rights, for international law, for a two state solution, for aid to flow, for hostages to be released. We stand for peace. We stand for an end to genocide,' Mr Harris said. 'The suggestion for a national day or moment of solidarity made by Michael Cush in the letter above is sensible and a good idea. It could be powerful if many countries did it together. I will now talk to colleagues on how to make this happen.' The World Food Programme (WFP) said this week that almost a third of people in Gaza are 'not eating for days', and that the crisis has reached 'new and astonishing levels of desperation'. The WFP, which is the United Nations food agency, said 90,000 women and children are now in urgent need of treatment for malnutrition. It also said 470,000 people are expected to face 'catastrophic hunger' between May and September this year.