Varadkar says ‘outstanding issues’ remain in relation to maternity hospital move
about 4 years in The Irish Times
Tánaiste Leo Varadkar says he has “no concern” that medical procedures which are lawful in the State will be prevented from being carried out when the in the new National Maternity Hospital (NMH) after its proposed move to the St Vincent’s campus.
However, he said there are “outstanding issues” over the ownership and leasing of the site where the hospital is to be built as well as governance and representation on the new hospital’s board.
His remarks come after a group of 42 senior clinicians at the NMH expressed concern that “misinformation” and “misunderstanding” about the planned relocation could delay the move.
In a letter, published in today’s Irish Times, the consultants insisted that all procedures will be available should the hospital move from Holles Street to a site on the St Vincent’s campus at Elm Park, including terminations and those relating to transgender and assisted reproduction services.
Mr Varadkar worked at the hospital during his training as a doctor and he was asked if he would have signed the letter if he was there today.
He pointed out he is not a consultant and didn’t say whether he would have signed.
However, he said: “I don’t have any concern about any procedure that’s lawful in this State being performed in the new National Maternity Hospital - that includes tubal ligations, includes terminations, includes gender reassignment treatments.
“I have no concern about that, and I’m happy that what we have in the various agreements covers that.”
He added: “I’m also happy that we will own the hospital, we will own the building.”
Mr Varadkar said there are “still two outstanding issues” - one “around the ownership and the lease arrangement” on the site where the hospital is to be built and the other being “the governance piece, the representation on the board.”
He said: “I’m confident that these can be resolved”, adding that engagement is ongoing involving the NMH, St Vincent’s, the HSE and the Department of Health.
The project has been mired in controversy after the Government admitted there were a number of problems in proceeding with the relocation, primarily in relation to governance and ownership.
The State, which is expected to invest some €800 million in the project, wants to buy the land that the hospital will be built on but the St Vincent’s Healthcare Group (SVHG) has said it must retain ownership of the site.
The Religious Sisters of Charity owns the land, which it intends to transfer to a new entity, St Vincent’s Holdings. It has proposed a 99-year lease and then a 50-year extension.
A rally held outside Leinster House at the weekend heard of concerns that access to all reproductive healthcare might not be provided at the new hospital because of potential religious influence.