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Emergency department in Navan to be replaced with 'medical assessment unit'

Medical emergencies such as heart attacks and strokes will no longer be treated at the hospital.

THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT in Our Lady’s Hospital Navan is to be replaced with a 24-hour Medical Assessment Unit, following years of uncertainty about its future.

The HSE has insisted that it is “incorrect to state that the emergency department will close”, and the new MAU will see roughly 80% of the current number of patients who present every day.

A Local Injury Unit will be opened alongside the MAU, which will treat minor injuries during the day.

The hospital’s ICU will close, and will be replaced by a new system of acute care.

The hospital’s clinical director Gerry McEntee said today that there are currently a number of risks for patients presenting to the emergency department in Navan, including difficulties attracting consultants to the hospital. There is also no emergency surgery in the hospital.

The MAU will treat patients who are deemed stable and not likely to deteriorate or require resuscitation

The hospital “does not have a number of this specialty services that are necessary to provide a comprehensive ED service”, he said, such as neurology for stroke patients and interventional cardiology for heart attacks.

An average of five to six unstable patients per day are currently brought to the hospital by ambulance but cannot be managed there. These patients will now be brought directly to an appropriate hospital.

Additionally, Navan’s ICU is the smallest in the country, and there is national and international research showing a correlation between low numbers of critically ill patients and “poor outcomes”.

The HSE has said that the transition to a MAU will not affect the level of activity within the hospital – it is predicted to become busier as a result of recent and ongoing investment.

The replacement of the emergency department with a MAU is the final step in the transition of the hospital to a “model 2” hospital, which does not provide emergency or unscheduled procedures.

Navan is the last hospital to complete such a transition, and the HSE have said that the change will make the hospital safer, allow it to provide a higher quality of care and increased activity.

Meath TD and Aontú leader Peadar Tóibín said existing problems in the health service meant that the move was a dangerous one. He said:

Their proposed MAU replacement for the A&E is dependent on GP referrals. GPs are impossible to get for new patients and existing GP patients are waiting up to 10 days for an appointment. There is no way the majority of people with an emergency health issue are going to wait 5, 6 or 7 days to go to a GP to get referred to an MAU. Also out of hours patients in an emergency situation will not wait. They will all go straight to overcrowded Drogheda A&E.

He said people are already waiting 12 hours for admission in Drogheda A&E. 

“Tens of thousands of extra patients from Meath may now have to join them. When hospitals are overcrowded they stop elective produces  that make up the bulk of their hospital waiting lists. The HSE plan will increase the length of hospital waiting lists,” he said.

The HSE says an additional emergency ambulance, as well as an additional advanced paramedic, will be put in place to deal with the extra patients in the emergency department in Drogheda.

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    Mute John Fagan
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    Jun 13th 2022, 3:37 PM

    That’s the HSE way. Starve a hospital of resources and then claim its not safe to keep services running there.

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    Mute Paul Owens
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    Jun 13th 2022, 4:27 PM

    @John Fagan: Starve,,24 billion every year,it’s not starved it’s the administration,the pen pushers,we just got another one for no reason on 60.000 a year,,to do what!!!

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Jun 13th 2022, 5:26 PM

    @Paul Owens: He meant starve the hospital of resources.

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    Mute Paul Owens
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    Jun 13th 2022, 5:50 PM

    @David Corrigan: resources is money!I mean for god’s sake

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    Mute FiannaFáilness FineGaelness
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    Jun 13th 2022, 7:08 PM

    @Paul Owens: Yes, Navan hospital has been starved of money/resources for years. It used to have what was regarded as one of the best orthopaedic units in the country, they closed it years ago, it’s Drogheda or Blanchardstown for breaks. When Navan and Meath had much smaller populations years ago the services available in the hospital were better and more plentiful.

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    Mute FiannaFáilness FineGaelness
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    Jun 13th 2022, 7:09 PM

    @John Fagan: See how this will affect Drogheda/Connolly now too…. UHL can’t cope since they lost the smaller services in their area.

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    Mute Owen Merne
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    Jun 13th 2022, 3:43 PM

    How can anyone in the Dáil hold their head high? How can any of them justify the wages they get? They’re doing a fine job running the country into the ground…and nobody has to answer for this mess.

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    Mute Jim Buckley Barrett
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    Jun 13th 2022, 4:16 PM

    @Owen Merne: Owen, when was the last time you heard of anyone getting fired from the HSE for messing up?

    No accountability, no responsibility. It doesn’t matter who’s in government, HSE management will be the same. The whole lot of them should be fired.

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    Mute Paul Owens
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    Jun 13th 2022, 4:25 PM

    @Jim Buckley Barrett: Well said Jim, absolutely true,I work in health service absolutely a joke, administration are a huge problem

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    Mute Niall Sheridan
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    Jun 13th 2022, 3:45 PM

    I no well remember Frankie “the fibber” Feighan standing up before the people of Roscommon with Edna saying their A&E was safe and wouldnt close! This was the same night Frankie was accused of assaulting a pensioner! 6 months later it turned into a endoscopy/colonoscopy unit! When Frankie lost his seat he was given a nice feather bed in the Seanad! He rebranded himself as Frank – but certainly not Frank and Honest!!

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Jun 13th 2022, 5:28 PM

    @Niall Sheridan: I remember that. He launched a very violent and prolonged attack on a poor man who only wanted to talk to Enda.

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    Mute Mogh Roith
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    Jun 13th 2022, 4:03 PM

    UHL is in the news regularly as being completely overwhelmed. This is a direct result of closing/downsizing other services. Yet FFG push on. This is more proof that a bloated and useless HSE is government policy.

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    Mute John Mcmahon
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    Jun 13th 2022, 5:19 PM

    I think the term managed decline suits Ireland at the moment perfectly

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    Mute Keth Warsaw
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    Jun 13th 2022, 8:59 PM

    I love that the photo got the entire hospital in frame. RIP.

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    Mute David Smyth
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    Jun 13th 2022, 5:51 PM

    RCSI hospitals overwhelmed also. Management moving ED patients on trolleys to other departments to make figures look good.

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