Opposition MP wants better maintenance at nation’s health facilities

11 months in TT News day

Fyzabad MP Dr Lackram Bodoe called on Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh to look into maintenance at TT’s health facilities.
He said the Ministry of Health was not only falling down in terms of providing maintenance in dealing with plant and infrastructural issues, but also staffing and nursing shortages.
He said this against the backdrop of a power outage at the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex (EWMSC), Mt Hope, last week, and after receiving information of broken windows at the San Fernando Teaching Hospital as well as non-functioning toilets and elevators. He asked if Deyalsingh could verify these claims.
At the UNC’s Sunday weekly press briefing, Bodoe said on a daily basis citizens experienced significant challenges as they tried to access healthcare.
Dr Bodoe said patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) were already quite ill and to have to transfer from one institution to another was unacceptable.
He added while this was not unknown in times of crises, to have this happening due to lack of maintenance and other issues it was “worrisome.”
Bodoe questioned a July 11 release by the ministry’s corporate communications department on the matter asking if the money spent on electrical repairs at the hospital was well spent and why did these issues persist at the EWMSC.
The North Central regional Health Authority (NCRHA) said on discovering the failure of the transformer, the RHA’s incident response team, along with the EWMSC’s engineering staff, with support from TTEC, responded by transferring the supply to a contingency electrical transformer.
It added that load-shedding was taken as a precautionary measure and all critical ICU patients were transferred to Arima Hospital.
He asked if Deyalsingh received an incident report and what steps were being taken to ensure prevent it from happening again.
Highlighting media reports of the halting of cataract surgeries at the San Fernando General Hospital, Bodoe said the machines there served its time and were no longer useful.
He asked why was it taking so long to procure the new machines and asked if the Government was delaying the procurement of the machines to facilitate a friend or financier of the Government who was trying to sell an untried and untested brand of this particular type of machine.
A cataract machine costs $600,000 and one was hearing about exemptions in the amendments to the procurement legislation for purchases under $1 million, he said.
He said the Government had a responsibility to provide adequate resources to the RHAs to enable them to do their jobs effectively which included adequate staffing.
Bodoe also spoke to the nursing shortage as well as the Couva Hospital and Multi-Training Facility.
He questioned why were the 230 beds and MRI and CT machines not being made available to citizens when the pandemic was over and there were no covid19 patients at the facility.
The post Opposition MP wants better maintenance at nation’s health facilities appeared first on Trinidad and Tobago Newsday.

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