Working in the Community, Working for the Community

Advice Clinics – Seamus Healy T.D.

Fethard:  Tirry Centre, Mondays @ 10am

 

Cahir:  Cahir House Hotel, Mondays @ 12pm

 

Tipperary: Marian Hall, Mondays @ 2pm

 

Cashel:  Kearney’s Hotel, Mondays @ 4pm

 

Carrick-on-Suir:  6B New Street, Fridays @ 11am

 

Clonmel:  WUAG Office, 56 Queen Street, Saturdays @ 10am

                  60 Elm Park, Mondays @ 7pm

 

No appointment necessary, all are Welcome.

Press Release from Save Our Acute Hospital Services Committee

Picture Courtesy of Clonmel Online

On the eve of a Bank Holiday weekend, and on the day that the Fiscal Treaty referendum result was the top news story,  HSE South chose their moment to announce the date of the closure of St Michaels Acute Psychiatric Unit in Clonmel, a decision which has been the subject of ongoing intense discussion and media interest for two and a half years.

In a press statement on  Friday 1st June  the HSE stated that acute admissions to St Michaels will cease from Tuesday 5th June. The announcement was contained in a lengthy press briefing which claimed that all the necessary community alternatives to hospital admission are in place across the South Tipperary/Carlow/Kilkenny catchment area which will now be served by a single admission unit in St Lukes Kilkenny.

The Clonmel based “Save our Acute Hospital Services” Committee who have been fighting the closure plan since it was announced without consultation in January 2010, have responded angrily to the news. This  Committee , in tandem with the Cashel Hospital Action Committee recently and unsuccessfully attempted  in the High Court to injunct the HSE from closure by invoking a previous High Court judgment from 1996 signed by the then Minister for Health Michael Noonan.  Committee members contacted by the Irish Times/other newspapers, made the following points regarding the HSE’s latest announcement:

“The closure announcement is wrong and unjustified on many levels. Firstly, the recent High Court judgment by the President of the High Court Nicholas Kearns has not yet been delivered in written form which prevents an appeal to the Supreme Court being mounted. It is therefore unjustified to proceed in the interim until the issue of an appeal is dealt with .

Secondly, at a meeting on 21st  May last, with TD’s Seamus Healy, Tom Hayes and Mattie McGrath,  the Minister for Health James Reilly agreed to consider their request to retain a small psychiatric unit within South Tipperary General Hospital.  This request was in line with a letter to the Minister by a delegation of South Tipperary doctors who wrote to Dr Reilly on 15th May in which they expressed grave concerns about the potential consequences of  the HSE plans, and also requested a meeting with him.

Thirdly, the Save Our Acute Hospital Services Committee have particular and immediate safety concerns regarding the assessment and transport of patients.  With the closure of St Michaels there will be no dedicated place of safety to assess and hold acutely ill patients , and in addition there is intense concern about the capacity of ambulance, gardai and nurse escorts to accompany acutely ill patients from South Tipperary to Kilkenny when admission is required, and of the capacity of the Kilkenny unit to accommodate up to 29 extra patients.

Finally, the committee’s longstanding objections to the closure plan remain.  The closure of St Michaels will disadvantage the most severely unwell patients and their families who will become dislocated both from their loved ones and also from their community teams. Both continuity of care, and family visits to persons with acute psychiatric illness are key to a speedy recovery and both will be greatly reduced by this move.

The closure is also a body blow to South Tipperary General Hospital which has a proud tradition of successful collocation of acute psychiatry and medicine dating back to 1968, the year St Michaels was opened.

The Committee are now demanding a moratorium on the closure decision and the direct intervention of the Minister to review their safety and other concerns as a matter of priority.

Germany Rejects Irelands “Yes” Vote – Seamus Healy TD

Before the ink was dry on the Referendum result, Germany has rejected any deal for Ireland on bank debt saying that it would be a “negative signal” to re-open Ireland’s rescue arrangements.

“We see no need for movement at the moment” said  Martin Kotthaus, spokesman for Germanys Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble.

 

The European Commission has also warned against liking Ireland’s Yes vote with the request to ease the burden of the banking rescue.  “It’s a further commitment but it has nothing to do with the work that Ireland is doing with the help of the Troika” said a Commission spokesperson.

 

Be assured we will be subject to endless talk about deals, possible deals, definitely maybe deals on the bank debt and promissory notes but there won’t be any lifting of the burden until an Irish government is prepared to play hardball through threats of default by withholding interest payments.  Things have moved on since Thursday, Europe’s attention has moved elsewhere, we’ve done our duty and we’re yesterday’s news.

 

The Government, Taoiseach, Tánaiste must now stand up for this country and demand that the commitments made during the Referendum are honoured.

 

Seamus Healy T.D.

Tel: 087 2802199


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