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Health Service Funding.

Dáil Éireann Debate, Thursday - 28 October 2004

Thursday, 28 October 2004

Questions (6)

Joan Burton

Question:

6 Ms Burton asked the Tánaiste and Minister for Health and Children the steps it is intended to take to address the €20 million deficit facing the main Dublin teaching hospitals, which has arisen largely as a result of higher than expected spending on expensive cancer drugs; if it is intended to introduce a Supplementary Estimate to deal with the deficit; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [26333/04]

View answer

Oral answers (19 contributions)

The quoted spending deficit for the Dublin academic teaching hospitals was €20 million for the period ended in July 2004. The position has improved over the months of August and September for the Eastern Regional Health Authority, ERHA, generally. The authority continues to work with individual agencies to manage the situation. In respect of the Dublin academic teaching hospitals, the ERHA is working with the agencies and believes it will achieve a break-even position by the end of the year. This year, an additional €4.6 million was allocated to the ERHA specifically to address service pressures in oncology and haematology, including oncology drug treatments in acute hospitals in the region.

I got the impression from the Minister earlier that she was claiming credit for the success of the economy but I presume she was not making that outlandish claim. The issue at hand concerns the economies of specific hospitals in the Dublin region which are already in difficulties and experiencing particular pressure in the accident and emergency departments. Does the Minister not accept that if there are increases in the throughput of patients in the hospitals, it will add to their budget requirements? Does she not accept that there is a difficulty in terms of the increasing cost of drugs and greater patient pressure? The population is growing and the budgets for the hospitals are simply not keeping pace. What does the Minister intend to do about it?

The Taoiseach has promised that there will be 900 extra beds in the system by the middle of next year. How many actual beds will be provided in this timeframe and how many of them will be in the hospitals in question? How many of them will be staffed? The staffing needs will add to the budgetary requirements of the hospitals, which are under pressure and cannot even manage within their existing budgets. How will the Minister resolve this? Will she please state how many inpatient beds — acute beds that are needed — will be provided from the figure of 900?

Successive Governments from all parties, including Deputy McManus's, can take credit for our economic success.

Exactly.

However, many of the policies on taxation and enterprise that are supported by the parties in Government have probably played a greater role in our economic success than those that have the opposite effect. We have different perspectives but shared ambitions. I am certainly not arrogant enough to claim full credit for our economic success. The same applies to the health service which requires many people working at every level.

On beds, I answered a question by Deputy McManus yesterday. She has the breakdown so I will not——

That does not give me the information I seek. It is not specified whether the beds are inpatient acute beds or otherwise. Of the promised 900 beds to be provided by mid-2005, how many are inpatient beds that will relieve pressure in hospitals and how many are day care beds, including couches, trolleys and recliners?

I assure the Deputy than none of the 900 beds is a trolley, couch, armchair or whatever the Deputy is suggesting. They are beds.

They are not.

Yes, they are beds.

They are not.

We do not call a couch a bed.

I am sorry, but the Minister does.

I beg the Deputy's pardon but——

The Department of Health and Children has provided the information.

I spent considerable time talking about this to my officials yesterday after the Deputy made her incorrect assertion.

It is correct.

Hospitals must live within budgets and the new hospitals office will insist that they do. We cannot plan anything if people do not live within budgets. That will have to be the way as we go forward. Otherwise, nobody can plan for the circumstances that will arise.

On new beds, there is a proposed new hospital for the Mater. As of now, it is not proposed to have any additional beds therein. We need to reconsider this. Clearly, if we are providing new, state-of-the-art facilities, we must use them to increase the bed capacity in the Dublin area. I certainly wish to pursue this in conjunction with my colleague, the Minster for Finance, in the context of our Estimates. We may argue about how many we need but the bed capacity strategy suggested 3,000 between now and 2011. Clearly, if we need more beds, we must provide them through the projects that are under way.

The intention is that when the Health Service Executive, HSE, begins, it will do so with a clean balance sheet and not with a debt from this year. We will insist upon this.

I agree with the Minister on the new hospital at the Mater but surely she cannot say that there will be no additional beds in the meantime. It is quite clear that if one goes to the accident and emergency department — I recommend that one does — one will see the additional capacity that has been provided very quickly therein. A resuscitation area has been provided in prefabricated units. Surely the Minister is not saying the hospital will have to wait for a new building before it can have additional acute beds. That is a question of policy.

Technically it can be done within a very short time if staffing and funding is in place.

As Professor Miriam Wiley from the ESRI said, faster turnover even by one day and earlier discharges of those who do not need to be in an acute bed would provide substantial capacity. The issue of bed capacity is being examined in the context of what I said earlier. We must examine what our resources will allow us to do in that context. Planning on a national perspective through the new HSE will make it easier to have a more integrated co-ordinated approach in this area.

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