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Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly Alamy Stock Photo

Sláintecare Council to meet Donnelly for first time since resignations

The council is discussing the state of the project with the Health Minister Stephen Donnelly.

A MEMBER OF Sláintecare’s Advisory Council fears more resignations will follow if they don’t see major action from the government in response to the stalling of Ireland’s health reforms.

Liam Doran, former general secretary of the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation (INMO), told The Journal remaining members have received “no communication from government that shows they understand” the scale of the ten-year plan.

The council is discussing the state of the project with the Health Minister Stephen Donnelly at 5pm on Friday in an online meeting.

It will be their first such meeting since the resignations last week of two key figures charged with overseeing the programme, Professor Tom Keane – who chaired the Advisory Council – and Laura Magahy, the executive director of the unit charged with driving the reform programme.

The Sláintecare Implementation Advisory Council (SIAC) is an approximately 20-strong diverse group of medical professionals and patient advocates.

“We’re looking for answers,” Doran said, “This is a massive exercise. It will span three or four governments, but we’ve heard nothing and had no communication from government in the past week that shows they understand this.”

On whether he believes more resignations are likely, he said SIAC members need to see a turnaround in the implementation of the Sláintecare programme. 

“A small number of people have indicated that they are thinking about their position. We need to come out [of the meeting with the Health Minister] where we’re in a position that having taken a step backwards, we’re now taking three steps forward – but the jury is still out on that.”

He outlined several key points council members want to raise with the minister, including the specifics of Magahy’s resignation, including its cause and the “internal departmental role” which a number of members believe played a part in her stepping down.

“There needs to be a plan for people who can come in and drive and energise the process from here,” Doran added.

Among the other points he said members will be raising are the decision to place the Sláintecare office in the Department of Health, where it’s just “one of many units” rather than in the Department of the Taoiseach.

“Why was that not done from the start as was recommended in the report? The Sláintecare plan needs to be at the centrality of the whole of government,” Doran said.

Members will also be stressing that “worldwide competitive contracts” are needed for hospital consultants under the plan, as well as emphasising that the “failure to implement” the six new regional structures for the HSE needs to be tackled.

“What’s happened there is that the HSE senior management won,” said Doran.

“We need those new structures and it’s necessary because it will integrate care between hospitals and community structures much better than how it is now, where there is a multiplicity of layers of management, making it harder to do work at all levels.”

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    Mute Neil Neart
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    Sep 16th 2021, 8:50 PM

    There are many anonymous unaccountable members of HSE senior management who have consistently and continually delayed reform. A good CEO and Sec Gen in Health would have sorted them out long before now. The Health Minister is just a figure head poseur and hasn’t, or never had, a clue how to action true reform.

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    Mute leartius
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    Sep 16th 2021, 8:15 PM

    HSE senior management must explain their position. Sláintecare has cross party support. For once a long term plan for equal healthcare in Ireland. I suppose Simon Harass was such a doormat as minister allowing budget overspends annually. HSE senior management must have broken out the bubbly when Stephen Donnelly became minister. I can count 5 FF TD’s that are far more qualified as minister for health.
    If HSE senior management won then who lost?

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    Mute Stephen Kearon
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    Sep 16th 2021, 10:55 PM

    @leartius: really? Care to list those better qualified than Donnelly? He’s one of the few TD in the Dail with extensive qualifications and relevant real world experience. A graduate of UCD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard Kennedy Business School of Government, plus was employed as a senior management consultant for McKinsey & Co, where he specialised in transformational change in Healthcare.

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Sep 16th 2021, 11:21 PM

    @Stephen Kearon: Can you share with us his accomplishments since he became a politician and more importantly since he became minister for health?

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    Mute Damon16
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    Sep 17th 2021, 9:14 AM

    I don’t know why people think “slaintecare” is going to be some sort of panacea. Its basically copying the NHS model. These systems have the poorest outcomes and longest wait times to access care. The public sector isn’t good at managing complex systems like health care delivery. We need a social insurance model with independent providers as is the case with the best health care systems in the world.

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