Kenny wants to see Portlaoise hospital report published

Taoiseach says agencies using public money should not be in ‘court situations’

Taoiseach Enda Kenny has said he wants to see the Portlaoise hospital report published but added two organisations using public money should not be in “court situations”.

He said Minister for Health Leo Varadkar was correct to say he expected the HSE and Hiqa to sort out their differences without resorting to the law.

"I hope now that the processes he has put in place will result in differences being ironed out and the report being published," Mr Kenny said.

He was speaking on his way into Cabinet on Tuesday morning.

READ MORE

The controversial draft report into baby deaths at Midland Regional Hospital in Portlaoisel makes more than 250 "adverse findings or inferences" affecting senior figures in the Health Service Executive, the Department of Health and the State Claims Agency.

It includes serious findings against medical staff involved in the care of 83 women at Midland Regional Hospitalin Portlaoise who provided information to the Health Information and Quality Authority (Hiqa), the HSE has claimed in correspondence seen by The Irish Times.

At least six separate findings imply a “reckless endangerment” of patients, according to HSE director general Tony O’Brien.

Accuracy and balance

Mr O’Brien, in a series of strongly worded letters to the authority, describes the women’s accounts as “unverified” and claims the draft report lacks accuracy and balance.

The dispute between the two State agencies, revealed in The Irish Times yesterday, has prompted Opposition calls for the immediate publication of the report.

Minister for Health Leo Varadkar said he expected the HSE and Hiqa to sort out their differences without resorting to the law but added it would be “totally inappropriate and irresponsible” to publish a report in draft form.

The document places much of the blame for Portlaoise’s problems on the HSE by citing passivity among HSE managers, constant changes in corporate structures and a lack of clear reporting roles as contributory factors.

However, Mr O’Brien accuses it of a “lack of accuracy, context, specificity and balance” and says it includes superfluous comments which are likely to cause needless distress.

According to Mr O’Brien, it is not within the statutory functions of the authority to make findings which would attribute blame, guilt or liability to anyone employed by the HSE.

He says the HSE accepts there were “shortcomings” at the hospital but “nowhere in the report is there any evidence of a recognition of the extreme financial restrictions that encumbered and obstructed the HSE’s ability to implement improvements”.

In a letter to Hiqa chief executive Phelim Quinn on March 13th, Mr O'Brien says he is left with no option but to take "an extraordinary step" and retain counsel to bring High Court proceedings to stop the authority publishing the report until affected parties have been afforded their rights to fair procedures.

Following a meeting between HSE and department officials last Thursday, Hiqa agreed to provide the HSE with more information on the findings in the draft report and the HSE withdrew the immediate threat of legal action. This will delay publication until next month at the earliest.

Mary Minihan

Mary Minihan

Mary Minihan is Features Editor of The Irish Times

Paul Cullen

Paul Cullen

Paul Cullen is Health Editor of The Irish Times

Martin Wall

Martin Wall

Martin Wall is the former Washington Correspondent of The Irish Times. He was previously industry correspondent