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Hospital consultants - milking the system for their own benefit!

  • 22-11-2017 9:43am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,886 ✭✭✭✭Roger_007


    I watched the Prime Time programme last night ,(Prime Time 21/11/2017), and was shocked at the extent to which the senior medical staff in our public hospitals are milking the system for their own financial benefit.
    They are paid a six-figure salary to provide a minimum number of hours caring for their public patients. Yet many of them seem to be paying far more attention to their private patients and doing far less than their contracted hours in the public system.
    If anyone was in any doubt about why there are such long waiting lists in the public system, a large part of the answer was provided last night. The consultants are, by keeping waiting lists long, forcing their public patients to go into the private system to get private treatment .
    I'm also amazed that there seems to be no political fallout about this scandal.


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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,057 ✭✭✭.......


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,675 ✭✭✭exaisle


    Roger_007 wrote: »
    I watched the Prime Time programme last night ,(Prime Time 21/11/2017), and was shocked at the extent to which the senior medical staff in our public hospitals are milking the system for their own financial benefit.
    They are paid a six-figure salary to provide a minimum number of hours caring for their public patients. Yet many of them seem to be paying far more attention to their private patients and doing far less than their contracted hours in the public system.
    If anyone was in any doubt about why there are such long waiting lists in the public system, a large part of the answer was provided last night. The consultants are, by keeping waiting lists long, forcing their public patients to go into the private system to get private treatment .
    I'm also amazed that there seems to be no political fallout about this scandal.

    What they didn't tell you was that the reason that SOME consultants don't work their full allocation of hours is that some hospitals don't have sufficient funding from the HSE to provide facilities (eg Operating Theatres, theatre staff etc) which would allow them to work full hours.

    Nor did they mention that the hospitals use the money obtained from private patients to fund themselves, which is why HSE and the government turn a blind eye.

    It's all very well to say we should only allow public patients to use public hospitals and that private patients can use private hospitals (or, indeed, that private patients' use of public hospitals should be restricted). The other side of that coin is that you have to fund and staff the public hospitals adequately, and as far as I can see, we don't have the resources to do that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,028 ✭✭✭✭SEPT 23 1989


    did i hear correctly that one scrounger was only doing 13 hours a week for their 200k a year?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,130 ✭✭✭Rodin


    The show left out a lot if information which would make the picture more complete.
    The spies in the car park didnt seem to be there after hours or on a weekend.
    Personally I often go in at the weekend to do admin work. Its often the only quiet time to do it and it is very productive.
    Also none of these consultants appear to have been on call or been called in out of hours.
    To think the 39hours should all be between 9 and 5 Monday to Friday fails to address that much work in medicine happens on an emergency out of hours basis. Something the spies in cars did not appear to be present for.

    Being in a private hospital when meant to be in a public clinic/theatre is shameful however.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,229 ✭✭✭LeinsterDub


    The entire system is a mess . We need a Single-payer healthcare designed from the ground up.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    Working 13 hours a week is disgraceful, but I've worked with many consultants in the Dublin hospitals and I can assure people that such low working hours are an outlier rather than the norm. Most if not all I have worked with would work beyond their contracted hours and were beyond frustrated with the system they work in. Much of their work is hampered by HSE funding. In one week we saw about 10 patients who required a particular procedure that the HSE will only fund once per week.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,439 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    The entire system is a mess . We need a Single-payer healthcare designed from the ground up.


    Completely agree, but there's little or no political will to do so. Two tier it is!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,364 ✭✭✭arctictree


    I don't see many other jobs where you are allowed run your own business on the side. Even worse, using your employers premises and equipment!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    arctictree wrote: »
    I don't see many other jobs where you are allowed run your own business on the side. Even worse, using your employers premises and equipment!
    This is really the primary issue and it needs to be broken out. By all means allow doctors to double-job, but on their own time and in another hospital. This abuse of public money has been going on for decades.

    My mother was a nurse in Crumlin Children's in the 70's and 80's. Back then the nurses were responsible for drawing up the surgery schedule for the following day. It was noted on a patient's chart if they were public or private patients. And the consultants "required" that their private patients were scheduled first every day. Patients who are scheduled later in the day are more likely to miss their slot because of earlier overruns or unexpected emergencies. And you couldn't discommode a private patient - they might go to another consultant!

    So if there were five surgery slots that day and four private patients, then only one public patient was getting their surgery tomorrow. And the day after that. And the day after that.
    Every now and again a consultant would intervene and direct the nurses to schedule a public patient earlier in the day. After that patient's parent had provided an "incentive" to get their child bumped up the surgery list.

    You can be sure the same bullsh1t takes place in public hospitals to this day. I have no problem with people paying privately to avoid the queue - provided that "avoiding the queue" means going to a private hospital.

    Lock it out, say from 2019 that there will be no private surgeries or consultations permitted in public hospitals, and then let the market sort it out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,802 ✭✭✭✭suicide_circus


    ^^^then watch a further flight of consultants from Ireland to countries where they can make the big bucks. This ludicrous system we operate is probably the only thing keeping some of them in the country


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,010 ✭✭✭velo.2010


    Treatment should be based on the level of need and not the level of income. There should be no private healthcare other than someone wanting a private room with Netflix.

    Newly qualified consultants must be contracted to work in the state for a certain number of years as the public effectively funds their training throughout.

    Anyone with the money and who wants to have less serious varicose veins treated, before someone else with a worse case, can go abroad.

    Harsh, but healthcare and education must be the top priority and all parties should strive to reach a common consensus on both. They can argue over other areas like transport, energy etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    ^^^then watch a further flight of consultants from Ireland to countries where they can make the big bucks. This ludicrous system we operate is probably the only thing keeping some of them in the country
    Fine, let them go. Plenty of others to fill their spaces. Thousands of medical staff from overseas dying to get work in western country.

    Since the majority of consultants are 35+ with families and interests in Ireland, I can guarantee you very few of them will magically up sticks and go overseas.

    A big chunk will get together to form their own independent hospital groups.

    The majority - especially those up-and-coming, will stick with their six figure salaries in the public system.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,057 ✭✭✭.......


    This post has been deleted.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,030 ✭✭✭njs030


    There's never any expose about the really good hard working consultants is there?!

    I had been waiting to see one and on the day had to rearrange as my child was sick. A week later I had a call from my GP to go in, the consultant had reviewed my files in my absence and written to my GP with suggestions for my care until my next appointment came round!

    That's really good care. Why isn't that level of care mentioned in these programmes to offset the bad ones?

    (When I did get to see him he spent about 30-40 mins with me talking through my illness and what he would suggest to help. No rush whatsoever.)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,130 ✭✭✭Rodin


    arctictree wrote: »
    I don't see many other jobs where you are allowed run your own business on the side. Even worse, using your employers premises and equipment!

    And in doing so, securing extra cash for the public system without which it would not be able to cope.
    The dirty secret is that without supplementation from private income, things in the public sector would be much worse.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,130 ✭✭✭Rodin


    velo.2010 wrote: »
    Treatment should be based on the level of need and not the level of income. There should be no private healthcare other than someone wanting a private room with Netflix.

    Newly qualified consultants must be contracted to work in the state for a certain number of years as the public effectively funds their training throughout.

    Anyone with the money and who wants to have less serious varicose veins treated, before someone else with a worse case, can go abroad.

    Harsh, but healthcare and education must be the top priority and all parties should strive to reach a common consensus on both. They can argue over other areas like transport, energy etc.

    Should all those who have their education paid for bu the state have an obligation to repay the state by working in the public sector or do you want a special rule for doctors?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,229 ✭✭✭LeinsterDub


    Rodin wrote: »
    And in doing so, securing extra cash for the public system without which it would not be able to cope.
    The dirty secret is that without supplementation from private income, things in the public sector would be much worse.

    We already spend a fortune on Health care. Heath care needs new processes not more money

    http://www.finfacts.ie/Irish_finance_news/articleDetail.php?Ireland-second-highest-OECD-health-spending-poorest-outcomes-506


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,107 ✭✭✭fly_agaric


    Rodin wrote: »
    Should all those who have their education paid for bu the state have an obligation to repay the state by working in the public sector or do you want a special rule for doctors?

    IMO Ideally they would have to work in public sector for a time after training but seems to me the medical training system (as well as the health service) in this country is malfunctioning, but no one really wants to change it.

    Too many of the places taken up by rich foreigners whose huge tuition fees sustain the system (would it collapse if it depended on state funding alone??).

    In a normal situation, expensive medical education would be considered a critical/strategic area for a country, and most places in state funded universities would be locked off for citizens/locals only who would mainly end up working in the local health service (i.e. not for sale to rich foreigners).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    fly_agaric wrote: »
    IMO Ideally they would have to work in public sector for a time after training but seems to me the medical training system (as well as the health service) in this country is malfunctioning, but no one really wants to change it.

    Too many of the places taken up by rich foreigners whose huge tuition fees sustain the system (would it collapse if it depended on state funding alone??).

    In a normal situation, expensive medical education would be considered a critical/strategic area for a country, and most places in state funded universities would be locked off for citizens/locals only who would mainly end up working in the local health service (i.e. not for sale to rich foreigners).

    To clarify, the HSE doesn't really pay for postgraduate training. Training is funded by the doctors themselves who must pay their membership fees to the colleges, pay for participation in their courses and pay for their examinations. Training is through the colleges, not the HSE.

    With regard to medical education, undergraduate is majority funded by foreign tuition fees while 50% of our Irish medical graduates fund their tuition themselves to the tune of 60k so there is no basis for forcing graduates to stay in the Irish system. Not least because it would be extremely damaging to the quality of care in the Irish system as we are a small country and are absolutely reliant on people training abroad.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    seamus wrote: »
    Fine, let them go. Plenty of others to fill their spaces. Thousands of medical staff from overseas dying to get work in western country.

    Since the majority of consultants are 35+ with families and interests in Ireland, I can guarantee you very few of them will magically up sticks and go overseas.

    A big chunk will get together to form their own independent hospital groups.

    The majority - especially those up-and-coming, will stick with their six figure salaries in the public system.

    I can assure you this will not be the case. You will see established consultants go fully private and younger consultants go abroad. Regardless of people's personal feelings towards senior medics, the quality of their training is second to none. Look at any random consultant's bio and you will see most will have trained in many prestigious places in the States, Australia etc. They earn far far more there (even with private work here), have a far better work/life balance and work in a system which isn't completely dysfunctional where they are free to do what they think is best for the patient without financial or bureaucratic restriction. For some reason they come back to Ireland out of some misplaced feeling of loyalty but if their pay is eroded further and they continue to be vilified by the public here I'm sure most registrars will just not bother coming back.

    If working in the public system was so lucrative and sought after by foreign medics we wouldn't have such a critical shortage of consultants with the highest number of vacant posts in the history of the HSE.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,060 ✭✭✭Sue Pa Key Pa


    velo.2010 wrote: »
    Treatment should be based on the level of need and not the level of income. There should be no private healthcare other than someone wanting a private room with Netflix.

    .

    I agree with that principle. However, I have to play the only game in town and I will make sacrifices elsewhere to afford the health insurance that allows me to leapfrog my fellow citizens in my time of need. Not ideal, but I make no apology for taking care of my personal situation


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,010 ✭✭✭velo.2010


    Rodin wrote: »
    Should all those who have their education paid for bu the state have an obligation to repay the state by working in the public sector or do you want a special rule for doctors?
    We train Gardaí to serve in the state and we train the defence forces to do similar. Its possible to expect doctors and nurses to stay at home and serve the country for a period.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    Anita Blow wrote: »
    For some reason they come back to Ireland out of some misplaced feeling of loyalty but if their pay is eroded further and they continue to be vilified by the public here I'm sure most registrars will just not bother coming back.
    You see, I'm not talking about eroding their pay. Simply restructuring how they earn it.

    We have an intractable problem which needs to be solved. And is going to require some short-term pain for long-term gain.

    There is no universe in which it makes sense that we have huge public waiting lists and consultants carrying out private appointments and surgeries in public hospitals. If private work was to be allowed in public hospitals, then only after all public patients have been treated.

    It may require higher spending in health, and locking consultants into "public-only" contracts that are expensive. But if it gets us some of the reforms we need, then it's worth spending.

    It's worth noting that it's a symptom of a poorly put together health system, it's not the cause of it. The entire thing is structured on geography rather than population dispersal. This results in far too much administrative overhead, too much money spent on day-to-day care rather than acute care, and acute care resources spread far too thinly.

    And that comes back to stupid policies that allow national politics to be influenced by local matters. This is why we have wastes of money like a major hospital in Ballinasloe, when there's a perfectly good major hospital in Galway. Because if they proposed closing Ballinasloe and making it A&E only, local politicians would be wailing and gnashing, and TDs worrying about the next election.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,571 ✭✭✭Red_Wake


    velo.2010 wrote: »
    Rodin wrote: »
    Should all those who have their education paid for bu the state have an obligation to repay the state by working in the public sector or do you want a special rule for doctors?
    We train Gardaí to serve in the state and we train the defence forces to do similar. Its possible to expect doctors and nurses to stay at home and serve the country for a period.
    Neither the Gardai nor the Defence Forces have a qualification which can be used abroad. Your example is very flawed.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,010 ✭✭✭velo.2010


    I agree with that principle. However, I have to play the only game in town and I will make sacrifices elsewhere to afford the health insurance that allows me to leapfrog my fellow citizens in my time of need. Not ideal, but I make no apology for taking care of my personal situation

    I understand that completely.

    The problem is, even if you have private only hospitals, I think you'll still have an overlap with public hospitals, which is not acceptable IMO.

    I also have a problem with those entering the medical profession purely for personal financial enrichment. I always thought of the medical profession as a deservedly well paid but, ultimately, vocational pursuit. Watching last nights programme tells me this is not the case with many.

    The only solution I can see is to completely differentiate private medical training and private medical care with public training of doctors and provision of public healthcare.

    Allow private medical training colleges to cater for those who ultimately wish to practise in a private only setting, ie, the state would not be funding the entry of publicly trained doctors into the private sector. Hospital training for those doctors would be done abroad. Many trainees come from a family background of doctors and are financially secure - they can afford to train privately. This may open up public training spaces for those who have a real passion for biology/medicine but because of socio/economic reasons may not normally be able to pursue a career in medicine.

    Allow foreign private medical providers to set up here. Any overflow would be dealt with by sending patients to their other medical centres abroad. That way you just may get a complete separation of the public and private healthcare system in Ireland.

    At the moment there is no separation and many are suffering needlessly because of it, as we saw last night.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 963 ✭✭✭mountai


    Whilst we have a system that nurtures conflict and cover up we will never make progress . Top managers seem to think that they have a right to be unquestioned in their jobs , OBrien , Woods et al . The hard working consultants are being dragged down by by the minority of leeches who are greedy and fraudulent who could be whipped into line by simply making them CLOCK IN . Not rocket science really . of course Harriss will wring his hands and promise to "Look at it" . **** .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,124 ✭✭✭jonon9


    The HSE is a cesspit of overpaid and under worked people, there is secretaries for secretaries far too many pencil pushers in the administration side of the HSE it need complete reform or disbandment. The amount of money wasted is disgusting and the hospitals are just getting worse.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,107 ✭✭✭fly_agaric


    Anita Blow wrote: »
    To clarify, the HSE doesn't really pay for postgraduate training. Training is funded by the doctors themselves who must pay their membership fees to the colleges, pay for participation in their courses and pay for their examinations. Training is through the colleges, not the HSE.

    With regard to medical education, undergraduate is majority funded by foreign tuition fees while 50% of our Irish medical graduates fund their tuition themselves to the tune of 60k so there is no basis for forcing graduates to stay in the Irish system. Not least because it would be extremely damaging to the quality of care in the Irish system as we are a small country and are absolutely reliant on people training abroad.

    I was thinking of the undergraduates when I posted that; didn't know so many of the Irish students were paying such large fees too? It would be unworkable + unfair to force people to work in public sector after qualification with the way the education system is setup now but if it were organised differently (not relying on fee payers) than it would be reasonable imo.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,010 ✭✭✭velo.2010


    Red_Wake wrote: »
    Neither the Gardai nor the Defence Forces have a qualification which can be used abroad. Your example is very flawed.

    What qualification they have is beside the point. We train guards, teachers, doctors, nurses etc. with the expectation to work in the public service - because we have a public service which need such people.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    seamus wrote: »
    You see, I'm not talking about eroding their pay. Simply restructuring how they earn it.

    We have an intractable problem which needs to be solved. And is going to require some short-term pain for long-term gain.

    There is no universe in which it makes sense that we have huge public waiting lists and consultants carrying out private appointments and surgeries in public hospitals. If private work was to be allowed in public hospitals, then only after all public patients have been treated.

    It may require higher spending in health, and locking consultants into "public-only" contracts that are expensive. But if it gets us some of the reforms we need, then it's worth spending.

    It's worth noting that it's a symptom of a poorly put together health system, it's not the cause of it. The entire thing is structured on geography rather than population dispersal. This results in far too much administrative overhead, too much money spent on day-to-day care rather than acute care, and acute care resources spread far too thinly.

    And that comes back to stupid policies that allow national politics to be influenced by local matters. This is why we have wastes of money like a major hospital in Ballinasloe, when there's a perfectly good major hospital in Galway. Because if they proposed closing Ballinasloe and making it A&E only, local politicians would be wailing and gnashing, and TDs worrying about the next election.
    I agree entirely with your appraisal of the health system. Every village expects its own centre of excellence but the public fail to realise that outcomes and expenditure would be so much better if we centralised services into major regional centres.

    The problem of waiting lists however is not down to consultant hours. It's a confluence of factors. As I said above, my consultant (Harvard-trained and absolutely outstanding) was frustrated beyond belief that he would see 10 patients a week needing a certain procedure that the HSE would only fund once per week. That's a waiting list that's growing by 9 people per week in one hospital alone. It isn't his fault that he can only use that theatre once per week, if he had it his way he would be banging through 20 public patients a week.

    Another example- I've a family friend who is a consultant surgeon. He would say how he would arrive in to work to find out that his public theatre list for the day has been cancelled by the hospital due to unavailability of theatres/staff. So he would have to go home because there's nothing else to do outside of operating that day. Rightly or wrongly, he would be a bit angry that he had lost out on a days work that he could've scheduled patients in a private hospital for (which I don't think is unfair).

    The HSE has a million problems, the biggest being the bureaucracy and complete mismanagement of casework and misallocation of resources. But consultants are a simple scapegoat Harris can for the public to beat them with and deflect from the actual problems in the service which government has no appetite to address (firing scores of admin staff and reallocating that money to frontline services).

    It also ignores the fact that consultants would simply move abroad or to full-time private work if forced into a public contract only. They have no onus to be locked in to such a contract and given the examples above why would they? Imagine being locked into a contract that pays you substantially less than you get now, and then being faced with turning up to work on a regular basis where theatre is cancelled and you've to sit twiddling your thumbs all day?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 147 ✭✭Jon_459


    The inability of hospitals to provide sufficient facilities (operating theatres, staff etc) which would allow them work their full hours was touted by one consultants on last nights show as one of the reasons.
    The response was then made that there are a lot of other activities such as reviewing cases, reviewing junior doctors work and, more importantly, training and guidance could and should be done if and when theatres are not available.
    It's not all about operations.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    velo.2010 wrote: »
    What qualification they have is beside the point. We train guards, teachers, doctors, nurses etc. with the expectation to work in the public service - because we have a public service which need such people.

    Then provide a public service which they actually want to work in, like every other western country does. Ask yourself why the majority of doctors coming out of college are choosing to move abroad.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,364 ✭✭✭arctictree


    Simple solution is to just train more doctors. Double the places. Anyone ever hear of an unemployed doctor?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭Sleepy


    Honestly, I still haven't gotten my head around why private medical practice was ever allowed in the first place.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,316 ✭✭✭✭the_syco


    velo.2010 wrote: »
    We train Gardaí to serve in the state and we train the defence forces to do similar. Its possible to expect doctors and nurses to stay at home and serve the country for a period.
    State pays for the Gardai and army training. State doesn't pay for training for the doctors and nurses.
    seamus wrote: »
    It may require higher spending in health
    Shall we reduce the Welfare payments to fund this?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,010 ✭✭✭velo.2010


    the_syco wrote: »
    State pays for the Gardai and army training. State doesn't pay for training for the doctors and nurses.


    State pays for third level tuition fees under the 'Free Fees initiative' for. students pay the contribution charge for student services etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    the_syco wrote: »
    Shall we reduce the Welfare payments to fund this?
    We can increase taxes. We have space for it, no matter how much wailing may be done.

    The aim should be to reduce costs in the long-term - close unnecessary hospitals & increase bed capacities at larger hospitals.
    So a short term increase in funding in order to clear a blockage is well worth it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,010 ✭✭✭velo.2010


    Anita Blow wrote: »
    Ask yourself why the majority of doctors coming out of college are choosing to move abroad.

    If its because it shows the dire state the service is in, then it should be the catalyst to do something about it and start by doubling down the all party agreement on the 10 year plan for free healthcare and the phasing out of private practise in public hospitals.

    However, if the answer is - because they see senior consultants earning the sort of money they will never earn - then I think they should question why they decided to plump for medicine in the first place.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    velo.2010 wrote: »
    State pays for third level tuition fees under the 'Free Fees initiative' for. students pay the contribution charge for student services etc.
    Medical schools differ in their funding.
    ~50% of EU places allocated to graduate entry which is entirely self-funded. The remaining undergraduate places are majority funded by international fees and the student contribution.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    velo.2010 wrote: »
    If its because it shows the dire state the service is in, then it should be the catalyst to do something about it and start by doubling down the all party agreement on the 10 year plan for free healthcare and the phasing out of private practise in public hospitals.

    However, if the answer is - because they see senior consultants earning the sort of money they will never earn - then I think they should question why they decided to plump for medicine in the first place.

    Why is it the onus of the young in this country to make some noble sacrifice for a government and public which holds them in such contempt?

    Would you yourself work a 30 hour+ shift and be paid for half of it? Would you work a 10 hour day each day and only paid for 8?

    Would you accept your employer routinely breaking the law and rostering you for illegally long rotas, knowing you can't just clock out at 5 because you'd be letting your patients down?

    Would you accept only being put on a 4 month contract at a time and being emergency taxed every 4 months? The hassle of trying to get a mortgage or loan when you can't demonstrate you're employed beyond the next 4 months?

    Would you accept moving around the country every 4-6 months for the 10 or so years until you can become consultant? Having to try maintain a family life, often holding down more than one rental lease because you can't find accommodation on such short leases?

    Would you accept the utter contempt the public hold for you working an 80 hour week for 33k as an intern?

    Would you accept working in a country where your 90k loan (which nearly half of graduates will have) will limit you from owning a house because the government doesn't offer tax relief on it while other western countries do?

    This isn't even half of the **** doctors have to put up with.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,010 ✭✭✭velo.2010


    Anita Blow wrote: »
    Why is it the onus of the young in this country to make some noble sacrifice for a government and public which holds them in such contempt?


    A line in the sand has to be drawn somewhere if we are to get a handle on things. We all paid for the sh1tstorm of the financial crisis and we got over it... sort of.

    I do agree though with many of the points you've made here.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,060 ✭✭✭Sue Pa Key Pa


    velo.2010 wrote:
    The problem is, even if you have private only hospitals, I think you'll still have an overlap with public hospitals, which is not acceptable IMO.


    None it is acceptable. It is not right that the people cannot access treatment in a timely fashion when they need it and it is not right that I have to pay nearly €300 a month for insurance for myself and my wife for a basic policy.

    I used my insurance for a procedure during the Summer for which the public waiting period is 3 years. My consultant told me I wouldn't have lasted the 3 years without treatment.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,057 ✭✭✭.......


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    Well it's the government's responsibility to get a handle on things, not its workers to just accept the status quo. As we have learned time and time again, the HSE takes the utmost advantage in exploiting its workers goodwill and the almost certainty that the general public will gladly take any opportunity to bash a profession they've been conditioned to perceive is somehow privileged (which is no longer the case). Its management is all too happy to make a scapegoat of them to maintain that status quo. And why wouldn't they? It works, looking at this thread.

    Like I said, ask yourself why doctors are leaving in their droves. Ask yourself why we can't even attract foreign medics. Consider these points the next time you or a loved one is in the ED after waiting 24 hours on a trolley to be seen by an SHO on their 20th hour of work with no break and no senior cover in the middle of the night.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,744 ✭✭✭diomed


    I'm outraged. B*******.
    But I've got excellent treatment for my many problems over the last six years. :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,046 ✭✭✭Berserker


    did i hear correctly that one scrounger was only doing 13 hours a week for their 200k a year?

    Very much the exception. My OH is an A&E doc and she told me that the consultants she deals with put in the hours.
    arctictree wrote: »
    Simple solution is to just train more doctors. Double the places. Anyone ever hear of an unemployed doctor?

    Nope, you need people who are smart enough to be doctors and want to be doctors. It's a very long, hard slog.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,010 ✭✭✭velo.2010


    Berserker wrote: »
    Very much the exception. My OH is an A&E doc and she told me that the consultants she deals with put in the hours.



    Nope, you need people who are smart enough to be doctors and want to be doctors. It's a very long, hard slog.

    I knew a couple of people who really wanted to be doctors. They were excellent at biology (A's all round) and knew every inch of the human body. However, a few marks sort in a couple of other subjects (and not being able to afford the grinds in the Institue in Leeson street) and they didn't get in.

    Most entrants come from a family with a history in medicine. Many have a passion but I'm sure some are just going through the motions as its what is expected from them.

    I wouldn't mind a process which gave more young people from varied backgrounds the chance to study medicine if they show a true interest for it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,995 ✭✭✭Ipso


    seamus wrote: »
    We can increase taxes. We have space for it, no matter how much wailing may be done.

    The aim should be to reduce costs in the long-term - close unnecessary hospitals & increase bed capacities at larger hospitals.
    So a short term increase in funding in order to clear a blockage is well worth it.

    No part would get elected on a slogan that has higher taxes in it. Irish people say they want good public services but don't want to pay for and don't seem to hold people accountable.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,046 ✭✭✭Berserker


    Ipso wrote: »
    No part would get elected on a slogan that has higher taxes in it. Irish people say they want good public services but don't want to pay for and don't seem to hold people accountable.

    And the extra taxes would get swallowed up by unions and middle management.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 79 ✭✭Moomintroll99


    I think it ignored the reality of the way consultants operate.

    Our 5 yr old has cancer and attends Crumlin. Most of the first few weeks he was there, he saw consultants at ridiculous times - 4 in the morning etc as an emergency, weekends, nights etc. When more junior staff saw him they often called consultants for advice at random times in the night. Ward round started at 8 every morning with time going over notes etc beforehand. Those guys were incredibly hard working, doing insane hours with limited resources. Stalking them between 9 and 5 would be completely irrelevant to their weekly hours.

    The biggest issue for parents at Crumlin is resources, not consultants' hours. Try talking to the parents of kids with spina bifida and scoliosis. They need specialised operating theatres, which Crumlin does have, but which HSE only funds a day or two each week - other days the facilities sit idle while kids suffer.

    I can see how it's two tier for the higher margin/less life and death stuff, like hip and knee replacements in adults, but when you have super-specialised stuff like paediatric scoliosis surgey or obscure kinds of childhood cancer in a country with a small population, how can you possibly have a 'private market' on the side? Our boy has a kind of cancer that comes up in about 3 kids per year in Ireland. There's literally only one guy who has the skills to treat him, and one hospital with the facilities. It's got to be funded centrally according to need.

    HSE just wants to shift the blame on to 'greedy doctors' because it's easier than the systemic change and big spending that's actually needed in health funding.


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