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Donegal councillor elected as Chair of the Regional Health Forum West
Donegal councillor elected as Chair of the Regional Health Forum West

Irish Independent

time25-06-2025

  • Health
  • Irish Independent

Donegal councillor elected as Chair of the Regional Health Forum West

The annual general meeting of the Regional Health Forum West took place t, as outgoing Chair of the forum Cllr Brogan leaves position saying 'We all have the same objective and that is to make sure that we improve the health service that we have'. Coimisiún na Meán Today at 04:40 Donegal county councillor Cllr Gerry McMonagle has been elected to the Chair of the Regional Health Forum West with Cllr Michael Kilcoyne from Mayo elected to the position of Vice Chair. Sinn Féin councillor McMonagle, was nominated by Cllr Donagh Killilea who said; 'Gerry is well experienced as we know and has served as chair in the past, we will put our faith in him for the 12 months.' Cllr Kilcoyne, an Independent representative from Mayo, will take on the position of Vice Chair of the forum. His nomination was also proposed by Cllr Killilea who said, "Albeit he's from Mayo and I'm from Galway, he's a fine man. He's served that position for the last 12 months and he's always stepped in when needed.' The outgoing Chair of the forum, Cllr Ciaran Brogan, seconded his nomination. The position of Chair of the Regional Health Forum Committee was filled by Cllr Bridie Collins. The Fianna Fáil representative from Limerick City and County Council was nominated by Cllr Francis Foley and Cllr Kilcoyne. 'Thank you to my colleagues for nominating me for Chair. I was nominated as Deputy Chair last year. I ended up chairing but its been a great learning experience for me. I'm very happy and delighted to be able to take that role on for the next year again,' she said. Lastly the position for Vice Chair of the Committee was taken by Cllr Gary Doherty, a Sinn Féin representative from Donegal County Council, whose nomination was seconded by Cllr Brogan. Outgoing Chair of the forum Cllr Brogan said: "It's been a busy time and after the local elections there's a new forum and a lot of new members. I want to thank you for the cooperation you have given me over the last 12 months, "We all have the same objective and that is to make sure that we improve the health service that we have, ADVERTISEMENT "We as elected members, irrespective of what political affiliation or what area we represent, all have the same passion to try and challenge the system towards the needs of the patient.' This article has been funded by the Local Democracy Scheme

Over 500 people currently on waiting list to see a cardiologist at Mayo University Hospital
Over 500 people currently on waiting list to see a cardiologist at Mayo University Hospital

Irish Independent

time24-06-2025

  • Health
  • Irish Independent

Over 500 people currently on waiting list to see a cardiologist at Mayo University Hospital

New data has revealed that 506 people are currently on a waiting list after being referred to MUH by their GP, additionally, 32 of these patients have been waiting for over 12 months. The issue was raised at the Regional Health Forum West meeting on Tuesday by Cllr Michael Kilcoyne, who is based in Castlebar. Speaking to the Irish Independent he highlighted just how serious this issue was, "Cardio is the heart, if something is wrong with the heart it needs urgent attention. If you have to wait that long to see a consultant then there is something drastically wrong with the system. 'They tell you that the first few hours are most precious if you have a heart attack. Yet they expect people to wait for over a year to see a consultant to have investigations. It means it is not being given the priority that it should be, "I just wonder how many of them are still alive if they are waiting for that long.' Integrated Health Area Manager for Galway and Roscommon Ann Cosgrove, assured the meeting that cardiology patients on the referral waiting list would be 'non-urgent' cases. She stated that interventional cardiology cases would not be done locally in MUH, they would be referred on to University Hospital Galway. Ms Cosgrove said in the meeting, "They've just had two cardiologists appointed to Mayo University Hospital in the last year. That [statistic] would be a backlog as there had been one clinician there before.' The advice given by Ms Cosgrove to any patient who might be concerned about their condition was to ask their GP to make further contact with the consultant, 'If somebody has concerns or if their condition has deteriorated in any way, your first port of call would be your GP,' she said. ADVERTISEMENT Data provided by Mary Warde, the Integrated Health Area Manager for Mayo, also revealed that a total of 4551 people are currently waiting to see a consultant at MUH. Cllr Kilcoyne said, "That's a huge number of people. It shows you how Mayo University Hospital has been under-resourced all of these years and continues to be the same way. "The hospital is full now, so is Galway in the West, and this is June. What's it going to be like in December.'

Hiqa review of emergency services pushed out until September
Hiqa review of emergency services pushed out until September

Irish Examiner

time16-06-2025

  • Health
  • Irish Examiner

Hiqa review of emergency services pushed out until September

It will be at least September before a Hiqa review of emergency services in Limerick, Clare, and north Tipperary will finish, leaving little time for action before winter illnesses hit. There was frustration locally when a May deadline came and went, but that has now been pushed out even further. It comes as 15 people waited longer than 24 hours on a trolley for a hospital bed at University Hospital Limerick (UHL) on Friday according to HSE data. The review will advise the health minister on whether a second emergency department (ED) is needed to support UHL. It is the only ED for more than 400,000 people. Hiqa, the healthcare regulator, said it is waiting for the ESRI to finish an analysis of emergency care demand up to 2030 by region. This will feed into Hiqa's advice for health minister Jennifer Carroll MacNeill. However, a Hiqa spokesman said it does not expect this ESRI work to be completed 'until later in the summer'. As a result, he said: 'The revised timeline for completion of the Hiqa final report will therefore be September 2025, contingent on the completion of the ESRI reports within the expected timeframe.' This is sure to cause concern across the Midwest with 102 patients unable to find a bed at UHL on Friday, according to the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation. Another four people were on trolleys in Ennis hospital, which does not have an ED. The HSE counts trolleys and beds differently to the union. However, its chart shows 59 patients without a bed on Friday. When this review was announced in May last year, hopes were expressed locally that a rapid-build approach could see a new ED within two years. Social Democrats TD Pádraig Rice, Oireachtas health committee chairperson, has raised the delays with the health minister. She told him, in response to a parliamentary query, the revised timeline was shared with her on May 28. This review will provide advice to me, as minister for health, to inform decision-making around the design and delivery of urgent and emergency healthcare services in the Mid West. Ms Carroll MacNeill described the ESRI findings as 'critical' to the Hiqa review. She also pledged: 'The final report will be published". The review was commissioned in the wake of public outrage at tragedies in the overcrowded ED. These included the deaths of Aoife Johnston, aged 16, in December 2022, Martin Abbott, aged 65, in 2019, and Eve Cleary, aged 21, also in 2019. A new 96-bed block is expected to be 'fully operational by September 2025' the CEO for Mid West Acute and Older People Services Ian Carter told Independent Cllr Seamus Morris at the recent Regional Health Forum West. He said recruitment is on track with campaigns running locally and internationally. The ED also hosts a 24-hour crisis liaison service run by the Mid West Mental Health Services. Last year, it saw 2,525 patients, Cllr Joe Ryan was told at the same meeting. Despite frustrations, Hiqa said work on the review has 'progressed very well'. It has inspected UHL and its sister hospitals and held a public consultation which received 1,121 submissions. Hiqa is before the Oireachtas health committee on Wednesday. Read More Hiqa to be quizzed by PAC about its oversight of nursing homes

No support staff for key CAMHS post in Sligo seen as reason why it hasn't been filled yet
No support staff for key CAMHS post in Sligo seen as reason why it hasn't been filled yet

Irish Independent

time12-06-2025

  • Health
  • Irish Independent

No support staff for key CAMHS post in Sligo seen as reason why it hasn't been filled yet

'At this stage I am of the view that the HSE in Sligo-Leitrim have never been serious about providing such a service,' Cllr Declan Bree told a meeting of the Regional Health Forum West. 'At meetings of this Forum over the past year and a half I have been highlighting the urgent need for the HSE to provide a CAMHS-ID Service in Sligo. 'While the service is provided by the HSE in other parts of the country there has been absolutely no service for children and adolescents in Sligo or Leitrim because, we were told there was no Consultant Psychiatrist to assist in providing the service. 'At every meeting of the Forum I outlined the heartache and trauma parents and families have had to go through as a result of the failure of the HSE to provide a CAMHS-ID service in Sligo. 'I was extremely pleased when we were informed last November that an Agency Consultant Psychiatrist for the CAMHS-ID Service had been appointed and had commenced work on the 19th of November. 'While welcoming that appointment I did ask if an adequate multidisciplinary support team had been put in place to ensure that the new service could properly respond to those who were referred to the service for specialist input. 'However, it was only at our meeting in February when it came to light that the Consultant Psychiatrist had resigned his post that we also learned that there was no multidisciplinary support team in place. 'CAMHS-ID teams consist of multidisciplinary team members such a Consultant Psychiatrist, Senior Psychologist, clinical nurse specialists, social workers and administrators. They offer: Assessment, formulation, diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders. 'However, on the basis of the reply I have received today we now know that none of these posts have ever been approved. We are also told that another Consultant Psychiatrist who applied for the position in the Camhs-ID Team in January this year withdrew his name in April. And of course what else would you expect, it there is no support team in place? 'Can you imagine hospital management appointing consultants, without having a support team of nurses, registrars, junior doctors in place. 'Yet the management of the HSE in Sligo-Leitrim have gone through the motions of advertising for a Consultant Psychiatrist for a CAMHS-ID Service without a multidisciplinary support team being in place. 'Surely, all the vacant posts in the team, including the post of Consultant Psychiatrist should have been approved and advertised when we were told that the service would be established in Sligo and Leitrim. 'The continuing failure of the HSE to provide a CAMHS-ID Service and to provide basic services for children with intellectual disability in Sligo and Leitrim is unacceptable and can only be described as a terrible indictment on the Management of the HSE,' said Cllr Bree. In response. Cllr Bree was informed the Integrated Health Area Manager for Sligo, Leitrim, South Donegal and West Cavan, J. Fitzmaurice that the national model for care for CAMHS-ID outlines the roles of MDT members trained in supporting children with intellectual disabilities and mental disorders. The team includes a consultant psychiatrist, health and social are professionals, medical and nursing staff ad administrative support. "While not all teams will start with full membership, the national CAMHS-ID programme aims to establish baseline teams in all areas including a consultant psychiatrist, senior psychologist, clinical nurse specialist and administrative support. "In relation to the Consultant position the PAS advertisement closed on January 31st 2025 with one application received. The post progressed to shortlisting which took place in April 2025. The candidate withdrew from the post at the end of April. We are in the process of getting the post re-advertised,' he said.

Frustrations in Galway at HSE's ‘disgraceful' delay in disposal of buildings on derelict hospital site
Frustrations in Galway at HSE's ‘disgraceful' delay in disposal of buildings on derelict hospital site

Irish Independent

time28-05-2025

  • Health
  • Irish Independent

Frustrations in Galway at HSE's ‘disgraceful' delay in disposal of buildings on derelict hospital site

At a meeting of the Regional Health Forum West on Tuesday, May 27, Fine Gael's Cllr Alan Harney said the HSE has failed 'abysmally' in relation to these buildings. The councillor said it's 'absolutely disgraceful' that the HSE has been served a Derelict Sites notice for these buildings following multiple pleas for engagement with local authorities. Cllr Harney said we need to 'see action' and 'immediate works' under way, and not further delays. He also noted the opportunity to transform one of these buildings into a health centre which is needed for the local Ballinasloe community. After a recent fire on the hospital campus, Cllr Harney noted an increase in security around the Ballinasloe site's vicinity, which he did applaud the HSE for. A response to Cllr Harney's request for updated information on the disposal of the site was answered by Niall Colleary, the HSE's Assistant National Director for Capital and Estates. 'The HSE are aiming to have a sales agent selected before the end of June to manage the disposal process for St Brigid's,' he said. 'The campus is not in compliance with Section 58 of the Planning and Development Act 2000, as the HSE has recently been served with a Derelict Sites notice. 'The HSE have engaged with the local authority in relation to this matter with a view to reaching agreement on a pragmatic approach to addressing the issues.' However, as Mr Colleary, or any other representative for Capital and Estates, wasn't in attendance at the meeting, Ann Cosgrove, the HSE's Integrated Healthcare Area Manager for Galway and Roscommon, assured Cllr Harney that the HSE is 'intent to move forward' with their strategy to destroy these properties. ADVERTISEMENT 'We need to keep it moving forward to get the best possible outcomes,' Ms Cosgrove said. Cllr Harney also expressed his annoyance at no representatives from Capital and Estates being in attendance at the meeting, saying he noted that there is 'no one here from estates which seems to be a common occurrence at these meetings'. Later in the meeting, following numerous questions directed at the HSE's Capital and Estates department, the Regional Health Forum West's Chairperson Cllr Ciaran Brogan asked if it is made a priority that a representative from that department be present at next month's meeting.

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