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'Groundhog Day' as month begins with 600 people on hospital trolleys

The figure of 601 is just short of the high of 612 patients on trolleys at the beginning of January.

Updated 7.55am

THIS MONTH STARTED off with 601 patients on trolleys and in wards, waiting on a bed, according to the latest figures from the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation.

While the trolley figures relate directly to accident and emergency departments, the ward figures count the number of additional patients on trolleys and chairs in excess of the listed capacity of these wards, which intends to give a general overall picture of overcrowding in hospitals.

The Irish Association of Emergency Medicine described the latest figures on trolleys as “Groundhog Day”.

Many of the major Dublin hospitals had in excess of 20 patients on trolleys, with Beaumont (38 patients) and Tallaght Hospital (41) having the highest number in the capital.

Further afield, the highest numbers across the country could be found in University Hospital Limerick (48), Cork University Hospital (43) and University Hospital Waterford (38).

The overall number of patients on trolleys had been declining over the course of this month, after reaching a peak at the beginning of January.

In the trolley watch figures for Monday 30 January, there were only 445 people on hospital trolleys, with increase in numbers in Dublin hospitals such as Connolly Hospital and St James’s Hospital helping to raise the trolley watch figures above 600 to kick off February.

The high number of hospital admissions at the beginning of January led to national ambulance service members reporting delays of between one and three hours admitting patients to A&E.

The crisis in emergency departments saw Health Minister Simon Harris describing the situation as a “perfect storm”. The latest figure of 601 patients on beds is only just short of the record high 612 observed on 3 January.

Responding to the current trolley situation, the Irish Association of Emergency Medicine said in a statement: “Yearly ‘plans’ and ‘Winter Initiatives / Plans’ have failed to address the issue and the HSE continues to condemn further patients to this very unsafe situation day in, day out.

How long do we have to remain stuck in this loop where there is a clear solution to the problem (the creation of additional bed capacity) and this solution is deliberately ignored?

If no improvement is made in the next year, they fear that another 300 to 350 patients will have died needlessly by this date next year.

Speaking on RTÉ’s Morning Ireland, Consultant in Emergency Medicine Fergal Hickey said that they were “very sure” that up to 350 patients would die, who otherwise would not have died, by this time next year if overcrowding continued.

This opinion is based on studies from Australia, which they have applied to the Irish situation.

“The evidence is very clear on this,” Hickey said. He added that at least one or two die unnecessarily in his own hospital in Sligo due to this problem each year.

“I’ve had to apologise to families where their experience has resulted in a bad outcome,” he said.

The key issue is the shortage of beds. There was a shortage of beds before austerity, and this shortage was worsened by austerity.

He pointed to a decrease in beds in the face of increasing demand as exacerbating the problem.

Hickey added that restoration of around 1800 beds he said were taken away during austerity, and the provision of several hundred more would be an essential first step in relieving the burden of high numbers on trolleys.

Simon Harris responded at the time of the programme airing by tweeting the measures he believes will alleviate the problem.

Read: ‘If this many people were dying in another way, there’d be war over it’

Read: How Ireland’s hospitals are massaging the numbers of people on trolleys

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29 Comments
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    Mute hibernia2011
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    Jan 1st 2014, 8:49 PM

    And those in rural areas of Ireland will get acceptable broadband speeds i.e more than 300k download speed.

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    Mute Barry O'Brien
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    Jan 1st 2014, 9:26 PM

    I’m lucky if I even get that. And I’m only about 10 miles from Cork City and am on a main road. Faster broadband would be a dream come true but I’m not gonna hold my breath…

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    Mute Martin Malone
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    Jan 1st 2014, 9:48 PM

    With the introduction of “4G”, the things we will be moaning about data limits, Coverage areas and network brown outs.

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    Mute Barry O'Brien
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    Jan 1st 2014, 10:12 PM

    And latency. Horrible latency. Useless for SSH to my server in Iceland which already pings almost 1s from my ADSL.

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    Mute Niall Lonergan
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    Jan 2nd 2014, 1:25 AM

    Don’t live in the country side and complain about broadband speeds! It’s like living on the moon and complaining about the weather! Want good broadband? Move to a city or large town!

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    Mute Clinton Slowey
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    Jan 2nd 2014, 12:50 PM

    I think 4G will be the best high speed solution for people in rural area’s

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    Mute Hippocrateeth
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    Jan 1st 2014, 7:52 PM

    I’m putting all my money on the internal combustion engine finally breaking through to the big time this year. It’s been a while coming but I think it’s time.

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    Mute ÉiRed
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    Jan 2nd 2014, 12:43 AM

    A vibrator which tells all your friends on Facebook when you are using it

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    Mute Tony Canning
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    Jan 1st 2014, 7:52 PM

    3d printing will also see interesting developments this year due to certain patents that are due to expire for methods other than the “stepstruder” style ones that are commonly seen.

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    Mute Clive Hand
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    Jan 1st 2014, 10:49 PM

    Curved TVs Curved Smartphones. Don’t see the point in them. Smart home tech like smoke alarms, integrated car tech

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    Mute Simon Eales
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    Jan 2nd 2014, 10:40 AM

    I’m still waiting for my hoverboard.

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    Mute Grumpeee Oldman
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    Jan 2nd 2014, 12:16 AM

    Cryptocurrency , E-Wallets and early Robotics.

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    Mute Energy Elephant
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    Jan 3rd 2014, 10:50 AM

    My tip would be for smart building/city applications such as http://www.EnergyElephant.com (nice little self plug ;0)

    You can increase your use of Irish and renewable energy by just checking when is best to turn on a washing machine, charge a laptop/iPad or have a low carbon cuppa! Think Irish, think green.

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