'We were promised this would be sorted' - Decade-long protest for 24/7 Cardiac Care 

"The Southeast is the only part of Ireland that does not have 24/7 cardiac care. The excuse about problems recruiting is an absolute joke."
'We were promised this would be sorted' - Decade-long protest for 24/7 Cardiac Care 

Mary Butler and Micheál Martin promising 24/7 cardiac care for Waterford in the lead up to the 2016 general election. Photo taken by Joe Evans in February 2016.

Cardiac care campaigners Konor Halpin, Mick Daniels and Anthony Kelly on Roberts Square, Waterford, Thursday morning, January 15.
Cardiac care campaigners Konor Halpin, Mick Daniels and Anthony Kelly on Roberts Square, Waterford, Thursday morning, January 15.

The Southeast Cardiac Care Campaign took to the streets to highlight the lack of 24/7 hour cardiac in Waterford. 

On Thursday morning January 15, Konor Halpin, Mick Daniels and Anthony Kelly set up shop on John Roberts Square to talk to people about their own experiences with cardiac care in Waterford. 

Konor said to the News and Star: "We're asking people: 'Do you know anybody who's had a bad experience, if they weren't able to be seen, etc. 

"It's 8am to 8pm now but obviously on the weekends people are going to bed worried. God forbid something happens in the middle of the night, what are they going to do?"

The men are long-standing activists for 24/7 cardiac care. They fear that last year's announcement of 12-hour daily care has diverted people from the real issue; that Waterford still has no 24/7 cardiac care. The men referred to the announcement as 'a diversionary tactic' to the people of Waterford. 

Konor said: "We were promised this would be sorted within 18 months."

Broken promises

In 2016, TD Mary Butler, alongside party leader Micheál Martin, promised 24/7 care for Waterford in the run-up to the general election. Photographer Joe Evans took the photo of Deputy Butler and Taoiseach Martin on the UHW grounds nearly a decade ago. 

Mick said of the photo: "They're both standing outside the hospital saying if they get elected that they will make it happen - which they didn't."

"We're three years on the streets filming interviews. We hear horror stories." Mick spoke about a woman who lost her husband only weeks ago due to the lack of cardiac care. Mick said that such stories are necessary to push for actual change: "The only weapon we have against them is to show the death and destruction, and it is death and destruction that this horrible policy is causing."

Left-out

The group are tired of the excuses used to explain why Waterford is left out when it comes to accessing full cardiac care. 

"The Southeast is the only part of Ireland that does not have 24/7 cardiac care. The excuse about problems recruiting is an absolute joke. The thirty plus other cardiac labs in Ireland have no problem recruiting. Why would there be a problem recruiting?"

Mick added: "We have heard privately from senior medical people that there is a hesitancy in the Department of Health. Explain that to me, why is there a hesitancy to save people's lives?"

The group are beyond frustration with the silence not only from the Government but also the media: "The media, in my opinion, is bought and paid for. All they do is peddle the mainstream BS. Why is this not on WLR seven days a week, people dying, people suffering the horrible experience of travelling to Cork in an ambulance having a heart attack?"

The group have re-created some of the stories they have heard from people affected by the issue to help raise awareness but have had no communications from the higher powers in Government. Mick said: "They avoid us like the plague. They don't want to know us, they refer us to their PR department. They won't take our calls."

Minister Butler was reached for comment. 

'The Southeast 24/7 Cardiac Care Campaign' highlighting recent media coverage of the 24/7 cardiac care approval at UHW.
'The Southeast 24/7 Cardiac Care Campaign' highlighting recent media coverage of the 24/7 cardiac care approval at UHW.

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