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Blow for Inishowen cancer patients 24.03.11

by Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

INISHOWEN cancer patients have been dealt a massive blow after Northern Ireland’s Minister for Health shelved plans for a cross-border radiotherapy treatment unit at Altnagelvin Hospital in Derry.
The Irish Government and the Northern Ireland Executive had agreed to fund the building of the satellite unit to treat those suffering from cancer in Donegal, Derry and Tyrone. But those plans were binned yesterday when Michael McGimpsey postponed the project claiming that cutbacks meant the North’s Department of Health couldn’t afford to staff the unit when it was due to become operational – in 2015.
Buncrana TD Pádraig MacLochlainn called on McGimpsey to resign.
“Michael McGimpsey has to resign. He doesn’t have a mandate to make a decision like this six weeks before the Assembly election. It’s unlikely he’ll be health minister after the 5 May election, Sinn Féin certainly wouldn’t endorse him again after a decision like this.”
“It will be 2015 before the unit is built and it’s unheard of for a minister who has the capital funding in place to shelve a project like this because of staffing issues four years down the line.
“Around 40% of the North’s annual budget is given over to health and McGimpsey should leave it to the next minister to worry about this. It’s scandalous that he should play politics with an issue like this.”
Deputy MacLochlainn re-affirmed Sinn Féin’s support for the Altnagelvin unit.
Fianna Fáil TD Charlie McConalogue said it was unacceptable that Minister McGimpsey should make a unilateral move to renege on an agreement that was in place between the Irish Government and their Northern counterparts.
“There’s an onus on the Northern Ireland Executive to live up to its obligations in terms of building and staffing this vital unit
“We must ensure that there’s a comprehensive service for cancer sufferers in the north west region and that Donegal patients don’t have to endure long journeys to Dublin or Galway for treatment.
“And the new Irish Government must maintain and live up to the commitments made by the previous government in terms of providing capital funding.”
Deputy McConalogue called on Dr James Reilly, the Republic’s new Minister for Health, to seek an immediate meeting with Minister McGimpsey and the North’s First Minister Peter Robinson to have this decision reversed.
Co-operating for Cancer Care North West spokeswoman Noelle Duddy said that her organisation was disappointed with Minister McGimpsey’s decision.
Speaking on Highland Radio yesterday, she said CCCNW was in no doubt that the other parties in the Northern Ireland Executive would reverse the decision and the radiotherapy unit would get the go-ahead again after the Northern Ireland Assembly election in May.
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