Irish Medical Organisation

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IMO AGM to focus on urgent need for investment in health services


Conference theme is Dying for Investment
 
 
Friday 21st April 2017.  The AGM of the Irish Medical Organisation (IMO) kicks off today (Friday) in Galway.  The AGM will be attended by Doctors from across the country including GPs, NCHDs, Consultants and Public Health and Community Medicine doctors.  The Minister for Health, Simon Harris TD, will address the AGM on Saturday.
 
The theme for this year’s conference is “Dying for Investment” and many of the debates and sessions will focus on the need for a radical increase in investment in health services to bring an end to the continuing cycle of overcrowding and long waiting lists.
 
During the conference, Doctors will be calling for new contracts and increased resources to stem the tide of increasing emigration amongst Irish doctors. 
 
·         Consultants will be calling for an end to the practice of paying new consultants lower salaries than existing consultants are earning – a practice which is being linked with the inability of the HSE to fill as many as 400 empty consultant posts across the country.  Consultants will also be challenging the repeated failure of the Government to honour the agreed terms of the existing Consultant Contract.
 
·         GPs will be hearing of developments in negotiations over a new GP Contract and calling for some immediate investment in General Practice which has been decimated in recent years.
 
·         NCHDs will be calling on the Government to demonstrate commitment to address the issue of training supports and a new NCHD contract.
 
Speaking today incoming President, Dr. Ann Hogan, said that the conference was taking place at a time of enormous challenge across the health services; “we need a step change in the level of funding that goes to health services in Ireland.  We have endured almost a decade of austerity and resources have been cut to the bone even as demand for services and patient numbers have increased dramatically.  Our message to Government is that as our population ages and we have to deal with more people living longer but often needing expensive healthcare along the way, that we now need to radically increase the level of spending on health care.”
 
Dr. Hogan said that the conference would also seek to focus attention on the high level of emigration amongst young, newly qualified doctors; “too many of our youngest and brightest doctors are emigrating to practice abroad.  They are being driven away from this country by poor working conditions and uncompetitive pay levels.”


 
 

Consuming alcohol during pregnancy causes FAS and Foetal Alcohol Spectrum disorders (FASD). - Presentation from Dr Mary O'Mahony

IMO AGM Galway
 
·                     Drinking during pregnancy can cause Foetal Alcohol Syndrome and Foetal Alcohol Syndrome Disorder
 
·                     Ireland one of top five countries with highest estimated prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy
 
·                     It is estimated that 600 babies are born with Foetal Alcohol Syndrome in Ireland each year
 
·                     80% of Irish women on first pregnancy reported consuming some alcohol in pregnancy
 
Friday 21st April 2017: Ireland features as one of the five countries with the highest prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy and consequent cases of Foetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS), delegates at the Irish Medical Organisation’s (IMO) AGM in Galway heard.  Speaking at the IMO AGM which runs until Sunday, Dr. Mary T. O’Mahony, Specialist in Public Health Medicine at the HSE told delegates consuming alcohol during pregnancy causes FAS and Foetal Alcohol Spectrum disorders (FASD).
 
It is estimated that 600 babies are born with FAS in Ireland each year with an estimated 40,000 people living with the condition in this country. 80% of Irish women pregnant for the first time reported consuming some alcohol in pregnancy.
 
Dr. O’Mahony said, “Drinking alcohol during pregnancy can cause a permanent disability called Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder. The consequences are induced brain damage which is permanent and is associated with physical, mental, educational, social and behavioural difficulties.”
 
At one end of the spectrum FAS may have visible signs of abnormalities and be recognised at birth.  FASD is not recognisable until preschool or school age when difficulties manifest.
 
Children born with FAS can show the following:-
 
·         50% development preschool normal.
·         All severe brain dysfunction at 10years.
·         10% attention problem at 5 years.
·         60% attention problem at 10 years.
·         Only 30% IQ below normal, BUT.
·         100% severe dysfunction in areas (eg. language, memory, activity level).
 
Addressing the IMO AGM Dr. Mary O’Mahony said that FASD has a huge societal impact and many children are misdiagnosed. “Children with FASD fill our Foster Care places, adults with FAS fill our jails and many people are misdiagnosed”, she said.
 
Dr. O’Mahony called for more support for women and more resources in the form of screening and interventions for alcohol and health promotion campaigns to educate women on the consequences of drinking during pregnancy. “We need to support women, clear consistent advice is needed to abstain from alcohol throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding.  Most people know that drinking alcohol while pregnant can harm the baby, but lots of women still have questions about drinking during pregnancy.  The long-term goal is to prevent Foetal Alcohol Syndrome Disorder”, Dr. O’Mahony said.
 
`1Lancet Global Health 2017, published online Jan 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2214-
109x(17)30021-9
 
2First International Conference on the Prevention of FASD

Dr John Duddy Outgoing Speach

When I took this position last year, I naively asked if we could use the word ‘crisis’ less frequently in our press releases. I felt it was becoming a tired cliché, losing all meaning from over-use. However, a year on, I have a different view. When there are 602 patients waiting on trolleys for a hospital bed, does the word crisis even go far enough? Does it convey the misery and suffering of patients waiting on trolleys for inpatient care? Perhaps we should use words like disaster or catastrophe. However, all three of these words imply an acute moment in time. In the Irish health service, this situation has become the constant and the norm. And it needs to change.

To achieve this change, the IMO has consistently called for adequate funding of our public health service. Capital investment has remained static at 5% of overall funding for the last forty years. This is clearly inadequate and has prevented our health service from expanding to meet the demands of a growing population which now stands at over 4.7 million people. We simply do not have the physical capacity in the secondary or primary care settings to meet the demand for medical services. A major investment programme in the public system is required. However, in some cases, doctors and others have not helped the progression of much-needed infrastructure projects. Ongoing turf wars over major developments like the National Children’s Hospital and National Maternity Hospital do not help our patients. Women and children deserve modern 21st century healthcare facilities. Doctors must put aside their differences and unite behind these projects.

One change that has taken place since last year’s AGM is a change of government, and the advent of the Oireachtas Committee on the Future of Healthcare. While the idea of a ten-year strategy for the development of health services in Ireland is sound, we are concerned at some media reports on the work of the committee. The announcement in January that the Committee would not be costing its recommendations did not bode well. The IMO supports the introduction of universal healthcare. However, the reported proposal to roll-out free GP care for all in the next five years is unrealistic and likely unachievable, based on current staffing and funding in the primary care setting. Equally, legislating to oblige hospitals to operate on patients within twelve weeks is impractical. It cannot happen unless there is an explosion in theatre capacity in this country. Even if all operating theatres were opened and fully staffed next week, it could not happen. There simply isn’t the physical space in operating theatres or surgical wards to cater for all the patients who would require surgery in this time-frame. If hospitals are fined or punished for failing to meet this target, it will have a negative impact on the whole hospital. This kind of target-driven culture will not help patients, and could ultimately harm them, as occurred in Mid-Staffordshire, where managers focussed on targets and numbers instead of patient care. The Francis report found that this resulted in the death of patients. It is disappointing that a promising idea has descended into empty ideological political rhetoric. The IMO is always open to a meaningful, realistic discussion on provision of healthcare in this country, and this was reflected in our submission to the Committee. We called for an open debate on the best funding model for our health services, and it will be disappointing if the Committee on the Future of Healthcare does not properly address the issue of funding.

Another seemingly unchanging feature of the Irish healthcare landscape are disputes between NCHDs and their employer. The last year was no different but thankfully industrial action was avoided over the Living-Out Allowance dispute. It gave me great pleasure to see the IMO achieve a pay rise for over 4,000 doctors, effective from 1st July. I hope that in future the HSE will live up to Director General Tony O’Brien’s call for employee disputes to be resolved through the usual industrial relations channels. The IMO had attempted to do this repeatedly over years to resolve the Living-Out Allowance issue. It was only through the threat of court action that this dispute was settled. That is no way to foster good relations between doctors and the employer. I look forward to the HSE changing its approach in the coming years. The next step will be to enter meaningful talks over training supports for NCHDs, as agreed earlier this year. I am hopeful this will begin a more positive relationship between ourselves and the HSE, and that we can work together to make the Irish health service a more attractive place to work for doctors.

Last year I spoke about my personal experience with workplace bullying. Sadly, I have learned this is not an isolated experience as I have been contacted throughout the year by other doctors who have told me about their own problems with bullying and harassment. This only strengthened my resolve to address this issue. This culminated this month in the signing of The Respect Charter by the IMO, The HSE, and the Forum of Irish Postgraduate Medical Training Bodies. I admire the active and positive support that HSE HR Director, Rosarii Mannion, has shown for this initiative. This is a good example of how the IMO and the employer can work together to address workplace concerns. Our fight does not stop here: we will continue to work with the HSE and the training bodies to change the culture, share knowledge and develop new supports for doctors who experience bullying and harassment during their career.

Another culture shift that has been to the forefront of my mind this year has been gender equality in Irish medicine. The IMO survey on these issues had more responses than any survey we have conducted in the last ten years, and the results will make for interesting reading when they are released later this year. I am proud to be part of an organisation that has led the way with female leadership in Irish medicine, appointing our first female president in 2002, the late Dr Kate Ganter, ahead of other prominent medical bodies. It will be a privilege to hand over the chain of office to my successor, Dr Anne Hogan, who will no doubt continue this line of strong women leaders in Irish medicine.

I asked at the start of this speech if anything had changed in the last twelve months. Change is a process, and I am proud of how we have contributed to that process during my time as President. In the words of Barack Obama, “believing that change is possible is not the same as being naïve. Go into service with your eyes wide open, for change will not come easily”. IMO members under the leadership of Dr Anne Hogan will continue to believe that change is possible, and will continue to make that belief a reality.

Leading health economist says that Ireland needs 2,800 extra doctors and 9,000 additional hospital beds to match OECD average figures

IMO AGM
 
Friday 21st April 2017.  Ireland would need 2,800 additional doctors and over 9,000 additional hospital beds to match OECD averages according to UCD Health Economist, Dr. Brian Turner of University College Cork.  Dr. Turner was speaking to the IMO Annual General Meeting in Galway.
 
Speaking today Dr. Turner said that the Irish health system has not fully recovered from cutbacks made in the 1980s and 1990s.  Despite significant population growth over the past three decades, he pointed out that the number of hospital beds is still approximately 1/3rd less than it was in 1980. 
 
Dr. Turner also pointed out that the country would face significant challenges in respect of health expenditure in the years ahead.  Dr. Turner quoted a report (The King’s Fund Report of 2013) which suggested that public spending on health and long-term care in the EU could rise from 6.7% of GDP (2007) to 13% in 2060.
 
 
Further Information:

Dr. Ann Hogan makes inaugural speech as new IMO President

Call for urgent and substantial increase in resources to tackle mounting problems across the health services

Blames “Fake News” and social media for significant decline in take up of cancer-protecting HPV Vaccination amongst young girls

Saturday 21st April 17.  The new President of the Irish Medical Organisation (IMO), has called for an urgent increase in resources to tackle the mounting problems across the health services.  Dr. Ann Hogan was making her inaugural speech as President of the IMO at the organisation’s AGM in Galway today (Saturday).

Dr. Hogan likened the condition of the health services currently to a patient with chronic illness; “the health services isn’t suffering from a temporary illness…it is suffering from a long term, persistent and severely debilitating illness caused by under-resourcing over decades and like any patient with chronic illness, the outlook is very difficult.”

Dr. Hogan said that the conference had highlighted the role that repeated underfunding over decades played in today’s health crises; “our problems today are an inevitable consequence of severe under funding of health services through the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. UCC economist, Dr. Brian Turner made it very clear in his contribution yesterday that we are still dealing with the consequences of those decades old decisions on resources and we will be forced to live with them for many years to come.”

Dr. Hogan also expressed concern at declining take up rates for vaccines in Ireland.  A Community Medicine professional who oversees vaccination campaigns amongst other things, Dr. Hogan expressed deep concern at the impact of social media campaigns and fake news about non-existent risks from vaccinations; “uptake rates for the HPV vaccine amongst young girls are declining to a worrying extent on the back of fake news stories about non-existent risks from vaccinations.  As a result, we are putting the future health of young women at risk of cervical cancer and other ailments.”

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