Europe News
Irish hospital consultants start limited industrial action
May 21, 2007, 11:33 GMT
Dublin - Ireland's hospital consultants started a limited campaign of industrial action Monday to protest against the government's ongoing recruitment campaign for new consultants without their agreement.
The 1,800 members of the Irish Hospital Consultants' Association (IHCA) had voted 93 per cent in favour of the action, which includes refusing to attend administrative and managerial meetings or to take part in government committees.
The IHCA was angered by a decision by the Health Service Executive (HSE) to go ahead with advertisements for 68 new consultant posts, despite its complaints that the new terms under which the consultants will be employed could lead to doctors working longer hours for less pay.
Health Minister Mary Harney told national broadcaster RTE Monday that the recruitment programme would continue.
She told RTE the public would not understand why the consultants were resisting the recruitment campaign when they had been demanding new consultants for some time, especially in areas like rheumatology, cystic fibrosis and psychiatry.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-AgenturCOMMENT
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Peter MartinNov 17th, 2007 - 20:42:39
Irish Hospital Consultants have threatened to boycott any new consultants recruited by Health Minister Marney Harney and the HSE, while claiming to agree that the problems of the Irish Health system can be solved only by these new recruits and a greater number of consultants generally! So how can the likes of Prof. Crown justify this clear contradiction in his position.In my opinion,either you agree that new consultants are necessary or you don't. His position is hypocritical in the extreme.The Irish system is based on a patient's ability to pay twice. Firstly, you are taxed on your income and expenditure. Then you have to pay Private Medical insurance to avoid the deadly queues of seriouly ill patients awaiting referral to a small, inadequate number of consultants. Irish consultants are the most expensive in Europe, costing five times that charged by similar consultants in Norway for example. The World Health Organisation have many other similar figures for other European countries if you want to check this out.Clearly, Ireland is a dangerous place to live if you have a problem with your health and the statistics prove it. If Professor Crown reads this perhaps he could reply dealing with any facts which might support his case.At present, he appears to be something of a hypoctrite claiming on the one hand that the health service needs urgent reform while being a prominent member of an organisation which clearly wants to boycott such reform in the recruitment of extra staff. I rest my case.
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