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Hospital chief hits back at union’s claim patient overcrowding situation is 'out of control'

The UH Limerick CEO said the INMO claims were “disappointing” and “incorrect”.

THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE of the UL Hospitals Group, has hit back at claims by the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation (INMO) that University Hospital Limerick (UHL) is “out of control” with overcrowding and that extra beds had failed to tackle the ongoing trolley crisis at the hospital

Colette Cowan said the INMO claims were “disappointing” and “incorrect”, because she said 98 single beds opened at UHL last January have not been used to offset “record” attendances at the Limerick emergency department, because they are being used for seriously-ill patients who are at high-risk of dying if they contract Covid-19.

We were looking forward to having the 98 beds, they were going to really assist our activity, but what I have had to do with those 98 beds is turn them into safe zones for the most sick,

“24 of the beds were for hematology-oncology, for our cancer patients, which protected them from Covid; then there’s others for renal patients who are at high-risk of infection.”

“Other beds are assigned for respiratory pathways for people who are queried-Covid, who are very ill, and who are on non-invasive ventilation at ward level,” Ms Cowan went on.

“All of the beds are fantastic single room facilities, and they are keeping people alive, and they are keeping staff safe, but they are not serving an ED surge,” she explained.

UHL was the second most overcrowded hospital with 50 patients on trolleys today, one less than Cork University Hospital (51), and 13 more than University College Hospital Galway (37).

Cowan said she refuted the INMO’s claim that the hospital was ‘out of control’: “I certainly do, as a management team we are in full control of whats happening and our whole focus is on our staff and our patients.

If you are on the outside looking in you might of course think its a busy service and nobody is doing anything, but that is totally incorrect.

Cowan said she was “disappointed” the INMO sought “ministerial intervention” and a “independent review” of how the hospital had managed patient overcrowding. 

She said she felt let down that the union had issued “broad statements, without any discussion with me formally”. 

“The facts are clear – We have an older generation living in the mid west and we have seen an incredible surge in (attendances) the last three weeks of people who are aged over 70, 80, 90 years of age, and they are very sick.”

In the 24-hours up to 8am yesterday, 247 people had attended the ED at UHL. 

There were 217 people around the country waiting to be admitted to a hospital bed today. The highest numbers (34) were waiting on trolleys at UHL, followed by Cork University Hospital (33), and University College Hospital Galway (27).

Cowan said the present surges in attendances at the Limerick emergency department – the only 24 hour ED serving Limerick City and County, Clare, and North Tipperary, as well as parts of North Cork – was due to older people presenting who have experienced “delayed care because of the pandemic” and are now “acutely ill”. 

“They don’t have Covid, but they have cocooned and they have now started to circulate in society, and while they are vaccinated, they are sick with other things and (their) diagnosis has been delayed.

They may not have come into hospital because of the fear of Covid, so they are quiet ill when they come in, so they are longer in hospital.

“The last thing we want to do is to send them home half-recovered, so therefore we have less beds, because they are longer in hospital. We have seen a 33% increase in attendances in the ED which we have based based over two years because you can’t really base anything on last year, so I think it’s really important that people get the facts.”

The Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly indicated yesterday he would not be intervening nor would he seek an independent review of how UHL management was dealing with overcrowding.

There’s already been a review and what the review said was we need more nurses, more consultants, more beds, more diagnostics, more home-care.

A lot of that was put in last winter, when we launched a €600 million winter plan, and in spite of Covid, which should have made the trolley crisis much much worse, we didn’t have a trolley crisis last year,” he said.

Minister Donnelly offered that, UHL had received a second MRI machine as well as part of a “significantly increased the home-care budget”. 

However, he acknowledged that more staff were required at the hospital, and that only “a small number” of the 34 additional consultants sought for UHL were filled.

Talks with unions into the “Safe Staffing Framework” are continuing, “but we need to recognise that the current staffing levels are not sufficient”, Mr Donnelly said.

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    Mute C_O'S
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    Jul 30th 2021, 3:50 PM

    Overcrowing is out of control and the result of governments in power since the millineum reducing bed numbers in irish hospitals as follows. There were 23,334 hospital beds in Ireland in the year 2000…… Since then the population has grown by 2 million +…. In 2018 there were 14,475 beds, which is 8,859 less beds since the millineum.
    https://www.statista.com/statistics/557287/hospital-beds-in-ireland/
    No wonder we have overcrowding in our hospitals.
    2021 = 2 million+ extra people — 8000 less hospital beds equals overcrowding and long waiting lists ahead in irish hospitals….

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    Mute C_O'S
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    Jul 30th 2021, 3:53 PM

    @C_O’S: Overcrowding

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    Mute Larsen Cib
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    Jul 30th 2021, 5:40 PM

    @C_O’S: this is the exact reason behind the longest and the hardest lock down in europe. Because the health system is at the very bottom.

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    Mute Rob Bulman
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    Jul 30th 2021, 10:51 PM

    @C_O’S: population has grown by about a million since 2000. Not 2 million plus. Miles off.

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    Mute Rostyballs78
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    Jul 30th 2021, 4:24 PM

    It’s hardly surprising when you consider that this Hospital has in recent years been made cater for large parts of Tipperary, Clare and Kerry as well as Limerick city and county. General hospitals in these counties are now effectively local injury units and geriatric care facilities. The catchment area alone has a population of half a million people. It’s actually a fantastic facility with a brilliant staff but it is wholly incapable of facilitating the numbers forced through it on a daily basis. Another spectacular decision made by successive government Health departments based solely on budgets and statistics. Little or no consideration given to the actual human element at all.

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    Mute feargal ‘2 metres’ de cantuin
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    Jul 30th 2021, 4:11 PM

    Has no one got anything to say about not getting the medical services that we pay for with Irish taxes? Yet the minister can float the idea of a Covid bonus while Western ERs are backed out the doors!

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    Mute Ger Finch
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    Jul 30th 2021, 3:44 PM

    Beds are not available for sick patients because they are full of sick patients? No bed problems here.

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    Mute ChronicAnxiety
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    Jul 30th 2021, 7:45 PM

    The fact that 50% of the population that can afford it, pay for health care in as system that is supposedly free to all makes you wonder.

    This is deliberate privatisation of healthcare.

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    Mute Marguerite Hoiby
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    Aug 1st 2021, 2:00 PM

    You can have as many beds as you can manage to fit into a hospital but they need to have 24/7 nursing staff!!!

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