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12 patients on trolleys in Letterkenny 06.01.11

TWELVE people were treated on trolleys at Letterkenny General Hospital yesterday as patients waiting for an inpatient bed hit a record level nationally.
Figures from the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation (INMO) trolley watch survey showed there were 569 people on trolleys in hospitals around the country including a dozen in Letterkenny.
This was the second day running that the figures reached record levels following Tuesday's figure of 511. Beaumont Hospital in Dublin had the highest number of people on trolleys yesterday at 45.
In March 2006, the Minister for Health and Children declared a 'national emergency' when there were 495 people on trolleys across the country.
INMO general secretary, Liam Doran said: “These figures, which are the equivalent of the total number of beds in a large hospital, are a direct result of a combination of factors which include political neglect and indifference to maintaining a quality assured public health service." He said there was a culture of "blind adherence to budget limitations regardless of their impact upon patient care" and a "lack of planning resulting in poorly-developed, or a complete absence of alternative services after centralisation into overcrowded centres of excellence".
Letterkenny General Hospital yesterday said the current delays within the Emergency Department were the result of high numbers of people attending with flu related illnesses as well as staff shortages.
Meanwhile, the INMO said it was imperative that the Government reacted to the waiting list crisis "with the same urgency, and priority, it has given to our economic difficulties and the supposed need of our bankers and saving our banks".
"It is time this Government looked after ordinary people, many of them elderly, who are facing this indignity, loss of privacy and potential compromising of their health and well being. Saying there is no money and we must do more with less, is cold comfort to the 569 patients and will not address their immediate needs or give them back their dignity," added Mr Doran.
"The INMO is available to engage on this crisis and we call upon the government and the HSE to acknowledge the extent of the crisis and to respond immediately with the positive measures detailed above.”
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