The City Voice

Page 1

Michael Noonan’s first Budget Limerick TDs share their views: page 11

theCityVoice Volume IV, Issue I

the voice of the City

Friday, December 9, 2011

159 women travel for abortions Aisling Hussey

• Clothes and personal items were frequently lost or damaged; and • Patients spent most or all of the day in bed with little or no activities in some cases. Eamon Timmins, Chief Executive of Age Action Ireland, highlighted the serious nature of the findings and insisted they were simply unacceptable.

AT least 159 Limerick women travelled to the UK for abortions last year, according to figures released to The City Voice. These women represent 3.9 per cent of Irish abortions, which is the fifth highest rate in the country. As women are not obliged to give their address when seeking an abortion, this figure could be significantly higher. Last year’s figures show a 15 per cent increase since 2008 when 131 women from Limerick had abortions in the UK. However, abortion rates nationally have fallen over the same period; from 4,600 in 2008 to 4,402 in 2010. Programme Director of Reproductive Choices Gabrielle Malone said that many women from Limerick call their Dublin offices. “We get a fair amount of women calling from Limerick looking for advice,” she said. “There are lots of different reasons why a woman would seek an abortion. There could be economic, personal or medical reasons. “Some cannot afford to have a child, or perhaps they don’t have a partner,” she said. CEO of the Irish Family Planning Association, Niall Behan said the reasons Limerick women were chosing to have an abortion were complex.

[ Full Story: Page 9

[ To Page 5

Ryan,Olivia and Clodagh O’Donoghue of Hyde Rd play at the People’s Park on Mallow Street

Nursing home shame HIQA reports reveal elderly care problems in Limerick homes

EXCLUSIVE

Karen O’Connor Desmond Chief Reporter

A SERIES of damning reports on nursing homes in the Limerick region expose a litany of problems in the standards of care for the elderly.

Documents uncovered in an investigation by The City Voice reveal that some elderly patients in St Camillus’ Hospital in the City had a bath or shower only every three weeks. St Ita’s hospital in Newcastle West failed to meet fire safety regulations, according to an internal report by HIQA, the health information and quality authority. Both hospitals are run by the HSE. While many of the problems were

minor, some were more serious. Among the other concerns highlighted by HIQA on Limerick nursing homes were: • Records detailing the date, time and cause of death of a resident were missing one nursing home; • Staff files were frequently incomplete, in some cases Garda vetting applications were missing in another; • Few staff were on duty at night in a number of homes;

sport: Big match

Page 30

MuNster ease past edinburgh: page 32

Easy Pickings as Munster bag bonus point with four tries


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The City Voice by Tom Felle - Issuu