You can
really only appreciate the scale of the crisis in our health service
when you experience it for yourself, be it personally or through the
eyes of a sick friend or relative.
The
main problem with our hospitals is not the standard of care provided by
those in the medical profession - it’s trying to get access to it. While
there are always exceptions, in general I have found the quality of our
medical professionals - from frontline ambulance crews to nurses,
junior doctors and consultants - second to none. In
particular, I will always remember how well we were treated when our
children were born in Holles Street and the immense gratitude I felt
towards the competent and caring midwives.
But
not all of my experiences with the health service have been so
positive. I have seen elderly relatives left languishing on hospital
trolleys and have endured long, painful hours in chaotic A&E
departments in the presence of aggressive drunks and drug addicts.
There
is a serious case to be made for segregating those presenting to
A&Es with alcohol related injuries. Unless there is an obvious risk
to life, they should be made wait the longest for treatment so genuine
cases can be prioritised by hospital staff.
Like
so many others, inordinate public waiting lists have forced members of
my family down the road of private consultants where they have paid
extortionate sums for 10 minutes of their time. Some private health
insurance policies seems to only cover a small portion of the fee these
days.
In
reality, our two-tier health service is pushing patients down the
private route due to the fear factor. People who are rightly worried
about their symptoms don’t want to be waiting for a year or more to see a
specialist under the public system.
But
doesn’t it seem wrong that you can see this same consultant - sometimes
within a matter of days - if you are willing and able to pay for it?I’m
no expert on health sector reform but would it make sense if
consultants were made to choose between their private and public
practices? Surely more time solely devoted to public patients would help
take the pressure off hospital waiting lists.
The
other side of the argument is that consultants may well opt to
exclusively concentrate on their lucrative private clinics, creating a
dearth of medical expertise in the public system. It’s a difficult
circle to square.
Given
the chaotic system he has inherited from his predecessors, it’s
unlikely that current Minister for Health Leo Varadkar will be able to
magic up any quick-fix solutions this side of a general election.Chances
are he’ll be leaving the Department of Health in the same sorry mess he
found it in. He has less than one year to prove us wrong.
Wednesday, 11 March 2015
Monday, 2 March 2015
Time to end discrimination in rental market
Is renting the new buying? Are we about to dispense with our national
obsession with owning our own homes and adopt a more European attitude
when it comes to long-term renting?
With
stringent new lending requirements introduced by the Central Bank,
purchasers are going to find it increasingly difficult to find a 20 per
cent deposit in a resurgent property market. First time buyers will have
to stump up 10 per cent for properties costing up to €220,000 (and 20
per cent of the balance above that).
This
well-intended measure, designed to avoid a new property bubble, is
going to push many families and individuals into the unforgiving world
of our dysfunctional rental sector.
Dubliners
will bear the brunt of the pain for the privilege of living in the
capital. Understandably, the country’s working majority need to be close
to their jobs or at least within reasonable commuting distance.
With
the recovery in house prices in Dublin, there has been an exponential
rise in rents. A quick search on a leading property website lays bare
the grim realities facing renters. Prices can vary from suburb to suburb
but it’s difficult to find a decent sized family home for under €1,300
per month, even in the less salubrious parts of the city.
Beyond
the Pale and away from urban centres, it’s a different story. I have
friends renting an idyllic rural property – a stone-fronted converted
mill – for €400 per month. You’d be lucky to get a garden shed for that
sort of money in Dublin.
Traditionally,
we were always led to believe that it made no sense to rent. The
conventional wisdom was: why pay ‘dead money’ when you could own your
own home for less?
But
we are now in very different times and prospective purchasers face a
range of obstacles before they can get a foot on the properly ladder:
risk-averse lenders; rising house prices; inadequate supply of new
homes; and new Loan to Value (LTV) borrowing restrictions.
From
this crisis we will see the emergence of a new breed of long-term
renter. Their children will grow up in rented accommodation without
having inherited their parents’ expectations of owning their own
property.
In
the absence of a properly functioning and regulated rental sector, we
have a long way to go before we can enjoy the standards and security
afforded to many of our European neighbours.
In
Ireland, some landlords have effectively operated a form of apartheid
that discriminates against those on rent supplement and casts a slur on
people in receipt of social welfare payments. The Government is finally
bringing forward equality legislation this year that will outlaw the
practice of specifically advertising for tenants who are not in receipt
of rent allowance. While this is a welcome step in the right direction,
will it go far enough in ending the appalling treatment of social
welfare recipients?
Local
authorities also need to ensure that slum landlords are eliminated from
the rental market by ramping-up their inspection programmes and taking
enforcement action where necessary.
Security
of tenure and measures to control the spiralling cost of renting are
also areas that will require progressive political thinking if we are to
offer future generations a viable, realistic alternative to home
ownership.
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