Punishing hospitals by withholding consultants

Health managers see consultants as optional extras whose numbers they can manipulate up or down at will

Letter of the Day
Letter of the Day

Sir, – The notion that the Department of Health can “punish” underperforming hospitals by not appointing medical consultants to them, or that efficient hospitals can be “rewarded” by giving them extra consultants, suggests that Ireland’s health managers see hospital consultants as luxurious optional extras whose numbers they can manipulate up or down at will (“Hospitals falling behind in performance face exclusion from funding for new consultants”, News, July 11th).

Are consultants not essential senior doctors whose numbers should depend on the patient workload rather than on any reward or punishment system? I suspect that there are international standards published by medical experts that recommend the number of consultants needed to serve a population or a hospital of a particular size.

The Department of Health should rethink its approach to the appointment of hospital consultants and apply those international standards rather than use the appointment of hospital consultants as a means of punishing or rewarding its hospitals. – Yours, etc,

PAVEL MARIANSKI,

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Dungarvan,

Co Waterford.