Protest against ED crisis to take place at Navan Hospital

A NATIONAL protest against the crisis in Emergency Departments will take place outside hospitals across Ireland at 1pm this Saturday, 21st January.

The chairs of hospital campaigns across the country met last week to put in place plans for protests outside hospitals across the country.

The chair of the Save Navan Hospital campaign, Deputy Peadar Tóibín said people are shocked and furious over the continuing damage that is being done to our health service.

"The crisis in our A&Es is leading to excess deaths and significantly damaged health of people right around the country.

"The crisis in A&Es has not happened by accident. It is a direct result of years of cuts to staff, beds and A&Es. A&E capacity has been cut while our population has increased and grown older. The HSE has closed eight A&Es over the last 15 years and the number of hospital beds has fallen by over 6,000 since 2008. We have 30 per cent too few doctors and 200 too few ICU beds".

He said what was really frustrating is that HSE senior management were still wedded to the policy of Emergency Department capacity reduction. "Today, in the middle of the worst A&E overcrowding crisis in the history of the state, the HSE are actively looking to close down Navan A&E. It is mind bending stuff".

"We welcome that fact that an increasing number of senior hospital consultants are breaking cover and stating the closure of certain A&Es was a mistake. The natural outcome of this realisation is that certain A&Es will have to be reopened".

Deputy Tóibín pointed out that many people cannot get onto GP lists.

"If they are on GPs lists, they cant get an appointment for two or three weeks. GP Out of Hours is creaking at the seams and is without doctor cover regularly.

"The breakdown of primary care is funnelling more and more people in to A&Es. The lack of step down facilities and blockages to further pathways of treatment mean that on any given day there are hundreds of clinically discharged patients in hospital beds. Key in all of this is the issue of terms, pay and conditions of health care workers. If these continue to deteriorate, we will continue to see the crisis get worse," he said.