Unpublished article from last year.
Unite
members in Fermanagh, a largely rural county in the south-west of
Northern Ireland, have
passionately supported a campaign to prevent emergency surgical services at
their local hospital in Enniskillen being moved over 60 miles away to Derry.
£5,000 has
been donated by the Enniskillen Unite branch to help pay for the publicity
materials that has been distributed widely. Activists including bus driver rep
John McMahon, branch secretary Derek Parton and Sean Rodgers at Liberty
Insurance have been at the forefront of the drive for better health care. This
work has also encouraged previously non- union members to join UNITE.
Campaigners
believe the proposed cuts would impact badly on patient care and could lead to
the eventual closure of the hospital, which Unite activists have long argued
has been neglected by politicians in Westminster, Belfast and Dublin.
Reconstructed in 2012, the South West Acute Hospital (SWAH) is the only
public-private finance initiative facility in Northern Ireland.
SWAH is
managed by Western Health and Social Care who Jim Quinn, a TGWU/Unite member
for 47 years, points out “from the start only ever used three of the five
theatres. They would have preferred to force people to travel on poor roads to
obtain care at Derry’s Altnaglevin Hospital.”
Large
rallies and public meetings over the last three years have forced Northern
Ireland’s Health Minister Mike Nesbitt to put on hold till after the summer a
proposed consultation exercise that is ultimately designed to close Enniskillen’s
emergency surgical services. This would force seriously ill patients to travel
to Derry. Avoidable deaths seem certain.
The change of attitude came immediately after the Irish Congress of Trade
Unions (ICTU) passed an emergency resolution at a meeting in Belfast backing
hospital campaigners.
“We suffer
from being in the south-west of Northern Ireland as we are the furthest County
from both Belfast, London and Dublin. Consequently, we don’t even have a
railway service,” states locally born Jim, who following his successful book Labouring
Alongside Lough Erne: A Study of the Fermanagh Labour
Movement, 1826-1932, is
currently writing volume 2 on the period up until 1978.
Nesbitt’s
pause is allowing campaigners’ time to refocus their efforts. They ultimately
hope to pressurise the health authorities, which a few years back failed in
their attempts to close the stroke and the neo-natal services, into providing a
more comprehensive range of services that people require.
“The local
political reps of all the main parties are supportive of improving patient
care,” states Jim and which “which could be made more viable by boosting
economies of scale by getting the hospital to serve cross border communities in
the south and north.”
To buy
Labouring Alongside Lough Erne go to:- https://www.connollybooks.org/product/labouring-beside-lough-erne
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