I move:
That leave be granted to introduce a Bill entitled an Act to amend the Children’s Health Act 2018 and therefore to amend the National Paediatric Hospital Development Board (Establishment) Order 2007 (S.I. No. 246 of 2007) so as to direct that the National Children’s Hospital be named Ospidéal Náisiúnta Kathleen Lynn do Leanaí.
Today 109 years ago, the 1916 Rising was coming to an end. Among those incarcerated was the only female commandant of the republican forces, the chief medical officer of the Irish Citizen Army, a pioneering medic and a suffragette. Dr. Kathleen Lynn was from Mullafarry outside Killala, County Mayo. Her father was a Church of Ireland cleric and her mother Catherine Wynne was from Sligo.
I am introducing a Bill to take the simple step Ministers for Health have failed to take since I first proposed this to the then Minister, James Reilly, back in 2013. The Bill aims to officially name the new children's hospital in honour of the trailblazer that was Kathleen Lynn. She was not just a revolutionary soldier but a founder of Ireland's first children's hospital, Teach Naomh Ultáin. She was a pioneer in the then male-dominated medical profession and helped eradicate TB in Ireland with the roll-out of the BCG vaccine during her long medical career. She died aged 81 in 1955. Kathleen was a city councillor for Rathmines from 1920 to 1930 and an anti-Treaty TD from 1923 to 1927. She learned of her election in that case from the milkman.
Tá tacaíocht don ainmniúchán seo, Ospidéal Náisiúnta Kathleen Lynn do Leanaí, 70 bliain tar éis a báis, tagtha thar na blianta ó réimse leathan. Shínigh na mílte duine achainí poiblí, ritheadh dhá rún sa Seanad, bhí litir ón Seanadóir Victor Boyhan sa The Irish Times an tseachtain seo caite agus tharla a lán rudaí eile ó na páirtithe uilig. Thug an Taoiseach agus an tAire focail thacaíochta nuair a bhí siad ag freagairt ceisteanna uaim thar na blianta. Tá súil agam go mbeidh siad in ann é seo a rith.