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The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. Ann Hutchison. Wexford Harbor. Wexford Town, County Wexford. Located in the South East of Ireland Also called Loch Garman Population County Wexford 149,605 Wexford Town 20,000 Originally established by the Vikings in 800 AD

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The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

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  1. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Ann Hutchison Wexford Harbor

  2. Wexford Town, County Wexford • Located in the South East of Ireland • Also called Loch Garman • Population • County Wexford 149,605 • Wexford Town 20,000 • Originally established by the Vikings in 800 AD • Changed hands many times due to its useful port • County Wexford contains the oldest functioning lighthouse in the world

  3. Hook Lighthouse

  4. Wexford General Hospital • The original hospital was built in 1840-42 for 5,780 pounds • It’s original purpose was a workhouse built to house 600 inmates • It was then repurposed into Wexford County Hospital which it remained until a new facility was built in the late 20th century • The new facility boasts 210 beds with 4 operating suits • The hospital treats approximately 15,000 inpatients and 9,000 day cases per year

  5. The Health Service Executive • The HSE is Ireland’s comprehensive, government funded public health system • The HSE is ran by the Minister of Health (Simon Harris) using the HSE Code of Governance • It is divided into 4 Regional Health Forums and futher subdivided from there • Who can access care through the HSE? • A person living in Ireland for at least 1 year is considered by the HSE to be an “ordinarily resident” and is entitled to health services • Two types of access, with medical cards and without medical cards, is available to residents of Ireland • Medical card eligibility is based on income (or specific situations such as children in foster care) • Patients with medical cards receive all services for free • Patients without medical cards receive some services for free and pay a low fee for others

  6. HSE Fee Examples for Patients Without a Medical Card • General Practitioner services are free • Referrals by a GP to a specialist are free • Specialist appointments without a GP referral are 100 Euro • This applies to A&E (accident and emergency) visits as well • Inpatient costs are 80 Euro per night with a max cost of 800 Euro per year • Long stay patients are charged up to 175 Euro per week • Individual payment is the same for public, private, or voluntary facilities • There are yearly limits for all out of pockets costs

  7. The Private System • There is also a private health system in Ireland • It follows the model of patients paying for insurance and having higher out of pocket costs for care • The majority of physicians in the public sector also see patients on a private basis • This higher quality care is only available to those affluent enough to pay for it The Cliffs of Moher

  8. The Good • The public health system allows access to healthcare for the whole population • Government oversight allows for standardization of care • It also allows for tailored utilization of resources • Yearly caps prevents medical costs from becoming a financial burdens on anyone, especially patients with severe disease • For example, Cystic fibrosis is very prevalent in Ireland • These patients have the same cap as everyone else Eagles Flying Animal Sanctuary

  9. The Bad • While access is available to everyone, it is rarely timely • Getting into a GP is reasonable • Getting an appointment with a specialist can take months to even years • When you do get in, it’s possible to get referred to another physician which comes with yet another period of wait time • A simple case of symptomatic cholelithiasis can take over a year to treat • Since the government runs the health system, they decide what supplies hospitals and clinics are allowed to use • This means CF patients may not get the best therapies and oncologists are limited in what chemotherapy options they have to use

  10. The Ugly • Ireland is a small country which means health resources can be limited • The government is in charge of how those resources are allocated • For example, there is only one neurosurgery team in the entire country • This means patients must be prioritized and certain people miss out on life saving treatment • Negative attitudes among healthcare providers is a very real thing • Some health professionals justify subpar care by the idea of “the patients aren’t paying for it anyway” Blarney

  11. Mr. S • Mr. S was a 63 year old male hospitalized for recurrent cellulitis • His case was straight forward but he was a unique individual • Mr. S was from County Wexford where he lived on a farm • My resident warned me before hand that he was challenging to communicate with • It turns out there is a unique dialect of English spoken by the rural population in Ireland • He was impossible to understand but we communicated beautifully with hand signs • It reminded me that unique culture is everywhere you look, even if you don’t recognize it at first

  12. Cultural Competencies • Describe social, political, economic, and cultural factors in the health of individuals and populations living outside the United States. The Gaol • Describe healthcare inequality in the United States and other countries. • Understand the pro and cons of universal health care systems around the world. Johnstown Castle

  13. References • https://www.wexfordcorp.ie/ • http://www.workhouses.org.uk/Wexford/ • https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/ • https://www.hse.ie/eng/services/list/3/acutehospitals/hospitals/hospitalcharges.html • https://www.hse.ie/eng/cards-schemes/medical-card/ Kilkenny Castle Portrait Hall

  14. Blarney

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