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The main entrance of Mid Western Regional Hospital James Horan/Photocall Ireland

Nurses ramp up protest with second strike over 'safety risks'

Staff members in Limerick say there is serious overcrowding, and €13million in funding is missing from the hospital budget.

NURSES AT A Limerick hospital are set to launch a second four-hour strike over what they say are serious risks to patients.

On Wednesday, nurses in the emergency department of the Mid Western Regional Hospital held a work stoppage in protest at overcrowding and funding shortages.

However, a representative today told TheJournal.ie that there had been “no progress” on their concerns, and another industrial action would take place next Wednesday. Mary Fogarty, a spokesperson for the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation which is fronting the protests, said:

On a continuous basis, the emergency department and wards are overcrowded. There isn’t the approved ratio of nurses to admitted patients, and there are clinical risks which need to be addressed.

She said the nurses had hoped for an intervention from Minister for Health James Reilly after their first protest, but none had been forthcoming. Ms Fogarty said one cause of the problem was that €13million in funding was “missing” from the hospital’s budget, after not being transferred when health services in the region were reorganised.

“When Ennis and Nenagh hospitals closed some services, the money should have transferred to Limerick,” she said. “We understand that it didn’t.” She added another problem was that the previous minister for health, Mary Harney, had employed additional consultants but not provided the funds to pay them. “That money is now coming out of nurses’ budgets,” she said.

When asked whether the HSE would like to respond to the nurses’ concerns, a spokesperson said: “No, not at present.”

In a separate development, nurses at Galway University Hospital yesterday said conditions for patients were “intolerable”. The INMO said 38 patients were on trolleys in the emergency department, eight of whom had been waiting for three days. One 78-year-old patient has spent the last four nights on a trolley, the nurses said.

Read more: Limerick A&E nurses begin strike>

Read more: HSE appeals to Limerick nurses to call off strike>

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5 Comments
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    Mute Brian Walsh
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    Sep 23rd 2011, 12:19 PM

    I have to applaud these nurses, they’re taking a stand for their patients – not themselves. Nobody wants to go to hospital, but when we, or a loved one, have to then we hope and pray there’s nurses like these who actually give a damn about their patients. That’s what nursing is supposed to be all about, caring, pity there isn’t more of them.

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    Mute jumpthecat
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    Sep 23rd 2011, 9:37 AM

    we should just close down all the hospitals in the country and build one centralised, super tertiary hospital in Athlone. Then every citizen will be equidistant from the new ‘national hospital’.
    We can name the wards after the nominees for the presidential race. For example the ‘Dana’ recovery unit or the ‘Labhrás Ó Murchú’ paediatric ward.

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    Mute paul mulligan
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    Sep 23rd 2011, 11:48 AM

    How would we all be equidistant from this hospital? Somebody living in Westmeath would be a lot closer than someone living in Donegal. Thats according to my map anyway!

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    Mute conoraleckelly
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    Sep 23rd 2011, 9:57 AM

    Wild horses would have to drag me to a hospital. And even then I bet they wouldn’t get me in the door. I’d rather die or be sick somewhere else.

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    Mute Ann Illing
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    Sep 23rd 2011, 5:18 PM

    The nurses in limerick should be supported & listened to by the HSE they are the ones on the frontline having to deal with the bad conditons. Management & politicians just have meetings to discuss it.

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