Minister says Rotunda consultants are paid 'very good salaries' and 'we expect them to be there'

by · TheJournal.ie

THE HEALTH MINISTER has said consultants at the Rotunda maternity hospital are paid “richly” to work in the public system, and are therefore expected “to be there”.

It comes after the hospital’s master revealed that consultants who signed public-only contracts were seeing private patients.

The controversy spurred the HSE to threaten a funding cut, unless the hospital began complying with its legal obligations.

Speaking to RTÉ’s Today with David McCullagh on RTÉ Radio One, minister Jennifer Carroll MacNeill said the state “has paid considerably to educate the consultants”, in addition to their salaries.

“They are being paid very good salaries to work in the public system, and we expect them to be there,” she said.

“It would not be correct for any health minister to not push this in the way that is necessary,” she said. “They have signed a contract.”

Asked whether she has confidence in Professor Sean Daly, the master of the Rotunda, MacNeill said: “I expect that he will make sure that the Rotunda is operating in compliance with government policy, and the contract that he personally has signed with the HSE.”

Funding cut? 

MacNeill said she has “no interest in defunding anybody”.

That is despite the HSE telling the Rotunda in a letter that it is considering all its options up to and including withholding funding, if the hospital continues to breach its contract with the state.

MacNeill said she anticipates that the Rotunda will soon comply.

The hospital has until Monday to provide information including the names of consultants operating privately and the amount of money billed for and received by the Rotunda for their services so far this year.

Asked what measures she’ll take if the hospital doesn’t agree to comply, MacNeill said: “They’re nothing that will interrupt [patients'] care.”

Advertisement

Insurance

MacNeill explained that insurance for maternity care is so expensive only the state can afford it. Hence, even private maternity care is provided in public hospitals.

“The scale of payouts in birth injuries, because of the nature of the damage done to somebody, is so great,” she said.

“There’s private orthopaedic work happening everywhere because, with every respect to an injury to a knee, it is not the same as a birth injury to a brain, and the cost of those different things are very different.”

MacNeill said that if the private network were to set up its own maternity hospitals and cover the insurance themselves, she would have no problem with that.

“The point of differentiation on this is if something goes wrong in maternity, at the moment it is only the state that can underpin the liability,” she said.

“That is not something that you’re hearing forthcoming from the (hospital) masters, when they have this conversation about choice.”

Public versus private 

MacNeill doesn’t accept that private maternity care is necessarily better than public. She said public maternity care should be perceived to be of the same standard as cancer or neurology care.

She said consultant-led maternity care should be available for any woman who wants it.

“Not just women who can afford it, but all women have risky pregnancies, all women are capable of having twins, all women can have gestational diabetes,” she said.

“There are risks with all pregnancies, and all women deserve and need the support that expert-led care can provide.”

MacNeill also said there is a narrative that private maternity care is “safer”, which is being pedalled by those who “benefit” from women choosing it.

There are currently 14 public-only consultants in the Rotunda. MacNeill says, in the future, every obstetrics consultant will be on a public-only contract, “as others retire and move out of the system”.

She said that the implementation of Sláintecare, which seeks to provide universal healthcare, requires public-only consultant contracts in public hospitals.

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.
Learn More Support The Journal