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The Saker
A bird's eye view of the vineyard

offsite link Alternative Copy of thesaker.is site is available Thu May 25, 2023 14:38 | Ice-Saker-V6bKu3nz
Alternative site: https://thesaker.si/saker-a... Site was created using the downloads provided Regards Herb

offsite link The Saker blog is now frozen Tue Feb 28, 2023 23:55 | The Saker
Dear friends As I have previously announced, we are now “freezing” the blog.? We are also making archives of the blog available for free download in various formats (see below).?

offsite link What do you make of the Russia and China Partnership? Tue Feb 28, 2023 16:26 | The Saker
by Mr. Allen for the Saker blog Over the last few years, we hear leaders from both Russia and China pronouncing that they have formed a relationship where there are

offsite link Moveable Feast Cafe 2023/02/27 ? Open Thread Mon Feb 27, 2023 19:00 | cafe-uploader
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offsite link The stage is set for Hybrid World War III Mon Feb 27, 2023 15:50 | The Saker
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Public Inquiry
Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005

offsite link RTEs Sarah McInerney ? Fianna Fail?supporter? Anthony

offsite link Joe Duffy is dishonest and untrustworthy Anthony

offsite link Robert Watt complaint: Time for decision by SIPO Anthony

offsite link RTE in breach of its own editorial principles Anthony

offsite link Waiting for SIPO Anthony

Public Inquiry >>

Human Rights in Ireland
Promoting Human Rights in Ireland

Human Rights in Ireland >>

Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link News Round-Up Sat Nov 30, 2024 01:30 | Toby Young
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
The post News Round-Up appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link ?Ulez Architect? and 20mph Zone Supporter Appointed New Transport Secretary Fri Nov 29, 2024 17:38 | Will Jones
One of the 'architects of Ulez' and a supporter of 20mph zones has been appointed as the new Transport Secretary?after Louise Haigh's resignation, raising fears the anti-car measures may become national policy.
The post ‘Ulez Architect’ and 20mph Zone Supporter Appointed New Transport Secretary appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Assisted Suicide Set to Be Legalised as MPs Back Bill Fri Nov 29, 2024 15:07 | Will Jones
MPs have voted in favour of legalising assisted suicide as Labour's massive majority allowed the legislation to clear its first hurdle in the House of Commons by 330 votes to 275.
The post Assisted Suicide Set to Be Legalised as MPs Back Bill appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Australia Passes Landmark Social Media Ban for Under-16s Fri Nov 29, 2024 13:43 | Rebekah Barnett
Australia is the first country to ban social media for under-16s after a landmark bill passed that critics have warned is rushed and a Trojan horse for Government Digital ID as everyone must now verify their age.
The post Australia Passes Landmark Social Media Ban for Under-16s appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Is Banning the Burps of Bullocks Worth Risking Our Bollocks? Fri Nov 29, 2024 11:32 | Ben Pile
Is banning the burps of bullocks worth risking our bollocks? That the question posed by the decision to give Bovaer to cows to 'save the planet', says Ben Pile, after evidence suggests a possible risk to male fertility.
The post Is Banning the Burps of Bullocks Worth Risking Our Bollocks? appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

Lockdown Skeptics >>

Spin Doctors Unable To Replace Doctors

category dublin | rights, freedoms and repression | feature author Wednesday November 10, 2004 16:45author by janette byrne - Patients Togetherauthor email patientstogether at eircom dot netauthor address dublinauthor phone 085 7302798 Report this post to the editors

Patients Together Appeal for Help on A&E Crisis

Mater Hospital Dublin (c) Irish HealthFrom The Newswire: My name is Janette Byrne. Up until four weeks ago I had a pretty stress free life -- then my mam was rushed by ambulance to the Mater hospital and everything changed in a day. My mother was very ill and continuously passing out and vomiting. The doctor thought it could be minor strokes.

I will try take you back with me and hope you get a feel for the upset our family and others went through. We arrived at A&E terrified our mother would die even as we travelled. On arrival we found her on a trolley having been moved from a chair as she repeatedly collapsed in my brothers arms. We have since heard of elderly people falling from the chairs and smashing their faces on the ground. The hospital was packed. It was as if some major catastrophe had happened and everyone was panicked. No doctor came to see my mother for a long time and we felt issolated. The staff were rushed off their feet. We were barely able to get their attention for a bed pan and my mother was lucky she had us to help.

We organised to stay on a rota through the night even though we all worked and have families. My mother is a very no-nonsense woman and i have never known her to show fear so when she asked us to stay we knew she was terrified. The noise level is unbelieveable: fights breaking out; phones ringing; unfortunates with drug or alcohol addictions roaring through the night. It is mad. There is one toilet between everyone, no soap, and the winter vomiting bug is rampant. My mother's back was killing her from lying in the one position flat and I asked for an extra pillow, only to be told there were none. There was blood splattered on my mother's trolley and around the floor, not hers might I add. At one stage the nurse could not find a container so my mother could be sick, so she had no choice but to vomit on the floor. It was still there the next night.

When the doctor told us he could not carry out the necessary test on my mother and that he needed her on a ward but could not get her a bed it was like a nightmare returned for me as I had gone to court three years previously to access a bed for myself to get chemotheraphy for my cancer.

It all became to much for us and another family (the Mulreanys whose 84 year old mother lay approx two feet away from my mam). We took to the street for a protest and phoned anyone we could get at short notice. There was about fifty of us with handmade banners our children or friends had produced. It was amazing the support we got and when we went to the main entrance of the hospital to collect signatures, it seemed everyone had a horrible story to tell. The next day we organised a protest to the Dáil with the support of the Irish Nurses Organisation and TDs. We cannot stress enough that we are a non-political group and will take to the streets with anyone who is looking for change to this horrendous problem.

At one stage as we protested outside the hospital someone came running out to tell us our mother had nearly choked on her vomit. We felt guilty for leaving her even for a short spell. The newspapers and telly thank God had an interest in our plight and before long it seemed like we opened a huge can of worms.

TV showed the disgraceful conditions the people in Cavan are suffering with no dignity or privacy. As someone said - animals are treated better. After nearly five days of torture my mother got a bed, at this stage my sister had the bug and my dad was unable to visit my mother as he also was sick and two of the Mulreany family ended up sick -- one taken to the hospital. We were all exhausted and I think my mother summed it up when she said she would rather die than go back there. She ended up with the winter bug and blisters from lying flat. She was also bruised from the trolley's restrictions. All in all, it's something that hangs over all our heads and I always worry that it could be me tomorrow. Please come with us Saturday at 2 oclock when we will march from the Garden of Rememberance to the Dáil to support the hundreds of people across our country who will try to sleep on chairs or trolleys for days - some, as we have heard, spending their last days there. It can't go on. We cannot wait weeks or months for it to be addressed.

We met with the Minister last Friday and she assured us the hygiene area was being addressed as we spoke, changing to a 24/7 rota. I am shocked it had to be higlighted first to be addressed and secondly that it was not in place already. It goes without saying that if the hospital with its crowded space and hygiene problems was a hotel or a bar it would be closed immediately.

I will finish with one of my worst memories: I also was left on a trolley for two days having been told i more than likely had cancer and was facing a life saving operation the next day. I shared a tiny room with two strange men -- a situation i would never put myself in by choice. I walked from my trolley to the outside toilet used by everyone, even those coming in from the street. It was freezing and I was embarassed and frightened, feeling very vunerable in my night dress. I went into the ladies to find a poor unfortunate man lying there shooting up. My legs were shaking as there was no lock on the door. I thought the nightmare would never end. Now remember, I am a young woman and live in a not-so-quiet area of Dublin but can you imagine this happening to your grandmother? It does not bear thinking about. Please, please support us. Give one hour of your time for change.

yours in hope,

Patients Together

Janette Byrne.

Background links:

  • Irish Times report on J. Byrne's chemotherapy battle
  • RTE report on delayed start of J. Byrnes chemotherapy after court battle
  • Dail debate July 2001
    The Minister's (Martin) tenure in the Department of Health and Children has been one of reports, strategy documents, steering groups, project teams, consultative fora, submissions and partnership facilitators. They are all a mechanism to avoid and delay the delivery of services. The Minister has failed to tackle obvious unbelievable shortcomings in the service. -- U. Byrne
    The then Minister for Finance, Deputy Quinn, and Minister for Health and Children, Deputy Noonan, sat down and discussed their priorities. They discussed what they wanted to do with the health system and made decisions. The key decision was to cut by 20% the funding dedicated to reducing public waiting lists. The men who now say this is the number one issue which takes priority over everything else put it at the bottom of the pile and, even though they were engaged in a failed attempt to spend their way back into power, chose to implement a decision which directly disadvantaged public patients. -- Martin

author by Janette Byrne - Patients Togetherpublication date Sun Sep 04, 2005 20:47author email info at patientstogether dot comauthor address author phone 0857302798Report this post to the editors

Just a small update, Patients Together are still alive and well and we are still working to highlight the on-going A&E crisis .People seem to have questions as to who we are and why we formed .They can check out our website on www.patientstogether. com

Thank you for your support

Janette Byrne

author by Michelle Clarke - Social Justice and Ethics - Pleasepublication date Fri Feb 04, 2005 21:20author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Is this group still in place?

The insurance issue with Consultants is serious. If our medical health staff are not satisfied, it is not possible for the economic model of Supply and Demand to be achieved.

I have spent a lot of time in and out of the health services as a patient.

I also wrote an essay for Sociology on Private health care and Public health care. I note the number of private hospitals that are being set up but does anyone ever ask the question - who loses out?

You are in a private health care hospital yet the consultants have to include time to travel to the public hospital locations. This whole issue hinges on the non definition of the Consultants post as either private or public but not both.......

I note that every check I have produces a verbal say lower disk problem.....yet when you have a stomach problem, it is a different consultant and you as patient end up confused, afraid to phone for re-confirmation, to make a follow up call......we are breeding a sort of medical intimidation due to a lack in defined Government Health Policy. The internet has being a saviour for me.....it has also provided communication and coping strategies........Are people aware that in going to different hospitals and records problems you may have more MRI's than is good for you. People have lost common sense. Xrays ought to be monitored and the patient ought to be fully aware.

The Church and the Medical Profession aligned in the days of Noel Browne and the Mother and Child Scheme.

They shared 'capitalism' as a motive....What is happening now?

If you review the system of Health in the North of Ireland, surely someone can take the lead and jointly move forward......



Michelle

author by Paul Kinsella - CPSU An Post Branch Committeepublication date Thu Nov 11, 2004 21:55author email paulkinsella53 at yahoo dot comauthor address author phone 085-1478100Report this post to the editors

And support Saturday's demo as well. Of course you're going to get the usual right wing cretins like on the An Post feature arguing "that its people's fault that they're ending up in hospital and why should they as hardworking taxpayers be expected to foot the bill?" "And that the health service should be privatised."

Related Link: http://www.cpsu.ie
author by pcpublication date Thu Nov 11, 2004 18:13author address author phone Report this post to the editors

this situation reminded me of the protests against Hanley's pln to close hospital units last year in various counties...,I glanced over articles about it at the time, but couldn't decerne whether people were concerned about the run down of the health services in the country or worried about just their own local hospital... (A&E and cancer units?), apart from antiwar marches and the farmers, this issues had the largest amount of people out on the streets last year...

it dind't seem to be a leftist issue, or maybe it just wasn't a Dublin issue.? And as usual there seemed to alot of polictical manuerving for the local elections too?

anybody know anymore about them.

...from Irish Times Nov 03

...where some 15,000 people marched in protest against the Hanly plan....


Meanwhile, the Ennis Hospital Action Group is to link up with other such groups in an attempt to form a state-wide campaign to resist Hanly.

With a similar protest in defence of Nenagh General Hospital to take place within a fortnight, there are concerns that other Fianna Fáil deputies will break ranks and join those opposing the changes rather than campaign to persuade their constituents that the reforms are worthwhile....

...Following a mass demonstration in Nenagh over the weekend nine hospital action groups have amalgamated in an attempt to force the hand of the Government to draw back from implementing the report....

...The anti-Hanly protest in Nenagh was attended by over 7,000 people, about half the expected crowd....

--
INO marches in protest at Hanly’s plans for Nenagh
http://www.ino.ie/view_categories.php?cat_id=535&doc_id=4052&sCat=535

INO members joined forces with 10,000 others in a recent protest march and massive public rally in Nenagh.

author by Con Lehanepublication date Wed Nov 10, 2004 22:15author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Health care is a vital part of the social wage and of social income. Claims that Ireland is now the "richest" country in Europe are laughable when such despicable, dangerous conditions exist in the country's hospitals.

 
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