On all levels we have been let down and consistently so.
a level headed piece in the Sunday Independent today, really encapsulates needs which doesn't
seem to be too much to ask given the complexity, i will share its link here
an obscene situation to be trapped in Ireland like this, taken this year in dire distress at decline and no care here |
i have consistently fought my corner for the care i know we should be getting and faced the state with very real disadvantage for those of us at the lower end of the economic strata who have to use the public healthcare system here.
Public Healthcare is for people who do not have insurance.
this means we are being provided for as is our right as citizens, but what many do not fully realise - very few are getting the care they need, lists are huge now, dangerous practises are at play and unqualified staff are doing complicated surgery way beyond what they are trained to do.
this is 'guinea pig' style healthcare where 'anything goes' for the poor.
i am fighting this injustice.
i have a limited life left and i experienced a packed full life of hardship and abuse but i never expected any of this to stem from our state systems, this was a real eye opener that the abuse we had had to overcome through our younger life is multiplied when you become so ill at the end of a difficult life span and face large faceless organisations who are in complete denial of their remit to care for the sick and the vulnerable.
fight on i will.
looking at the fabulous expansive detail in policy that has been enacted which must have taken yardage and funding to produce remains that sophisticated papers still take ink but after that we have what appears to be 'impasse'
Standards of care for people with disabling (progressive and static) neurological conditions in the hospitals and community
2008
the Rare Diseases Plan
2014
Plans devised by Experts spanning 7 years.
Action thus far – zero – for Ann and Margaret Kennedy in the context of complex disabling progressive neurological conditions (in the hospitals and community) and the Rare diseases Plan of 2014
we contend that NO diseases specific care, treatment, oversight, diagnostic tools have been use in the past two years and some date back to lack of disease appropriate treatment and therapies have ever been implimented as first recommended in 2009.
this is a violation of our rights to healthcare.
THE EUROPEAN CHARTER FOR PATIENTS RIGHTS
The Nice Charter of Fundamental Rights will soon be part of the new European constitution. (i believe it already is) It is the basis of the declaration of the fourteen concrete patients’ rights currently at risk: the right to preventive measures, access, information, consent, free choice, privacy and confidentiality, respect of patients’ time, observance of quality standards, safety, innovation, avoidance of unnecessary suffering and pain and personalised treatment, and the right to complain and to receive compensation.
These rights are also linked to several international declarations and recommendations, issued by both the WHO and the Council of Europe. They regard organisational standards and technical parameters, as well as professional patterns and behaviour.
THIS CHARTER FURTHER CLAIMS:
The Charter of Fundamental Rights, (we have signed up to this) which will represent the first “brick” in the European constitution, is the main reference point of the present Charter. It affirms a series of inalienable, universal rights, which EU organs and Member States cannot limit, and individuals cannot waive.
♦ Article 35 of the Charter provides for a right to health protection as the “right of access to preventive health care and the right to benefit from medical treatment under the conditions established by national laws and practices”.
Article 35 specifies that the Union must guarantee “a high level of protection of human health,” meaning health as both an individual and social good, as well as health care. This formula sets a guiding standard for the national governments: do not stop at the floor of the “minimum guaranteed standards” but aim for the highest level, notwithstanding differences in the capacity of the various
systems to provide services.
♦ In addition to Article 35, the Charter of Fundamental Rights contains many provisions that refer either directly or indirectly to patients’ rights, and are worth recalling: the inviolability of human dignity (article 1) and the right to life (article 2); the right to the integrity of the person
(article 3);
2.Other international references
The fourteen rights illustrated below are also linked to other international documents and declarations, emanating in particular from the WHO and the Council of Europe. As regards the WHO, the most relevant documents are the following:
- The Declaration on the Promotion of Patients’ Rights in Europe, endorsed in Amsterdam in 1994;
PART TWO: FOURTEEN RIGHTS OF THE PATIENT
This part proposes the proclamation of fourteen patients’ rights, which together seek to render the fundamental rights recalled above concrete, applicable and appropriate to the current transitory situation in the health services. These rights all aim to guarantee a “high level of human health protection” (Article 35 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights), to assure the high quality of services provided by the various national health services. They must be protected throughout the entire territory of the European Union.
1-Right to Preventive Measures
Every individual has the right to a proper service in order to prevent illness. The health services have the duty to pursue this end by raising people’s awareness, guaranteeing health procedures at regular intervals free of charge for various groups of the population at risk, and making the results of scientific research and technological innovation available to all.
2-Right of Access
Every individual has the right of access to the health services that his or her health needs require.
The health services must guarantee equal access to everyone, without discriminating on the basis of financial resources, place of residence, kind of illness or time of access to services. An individual requiring treatment, but unable to sustain the costs, has the right to be served free of charge.
Each individual has the right to adequate services, independently of whether he or she has been admitted to a small or large hospital or clinic. Each individual, even without a required residence permit, has the right to urgent or essential outpatient and inpatient care.
An individual suffering from a rare disease has the same right to the necessary treatments and medication as someone with a more common disease.
3-Right to Information
Every individual has the right to access to all kind of information regarding their state of health, the health services and how to use them, and all that scientific research and technological innovation makes available.
Health care services, providers and professionals have to provide patient-tailored information, particularly taking into account the religious, ethnic or linguistic specificities of the patient. The health services have the duty to make all information easily accessible, removing bureaucratic obstacles, educating health care providers, preparing and distributing informational materials.
A patient has the right of direct access to his or her clinical file and medical records, to photocopy them, to ask questions about their contents and to obtain the correction of any errors they might
contain. A hospital patient has the right to information which is continuous and thorough; this might be guaranteed by a “tutor”.
Every individual has the right of direct access to information on scientific research, pharmaceutical care and technological innovations. This information can come from either public or private sources, provided that it meets the criteria of accuracy, reliability and transparency.
5
4-Right to Consent
Every individual has the right of access to all information that might enable him or her to actively participate in the decisions regarding his or her health; this information is a prerequisite for any procedure and treatment, including the participation in scientific research.
Health care providers and professionals must give the patient all information relative to a treatment or an operation to be undergone, including the associated risks and discomforts, side-effects and
alternatives. This information must be given with enough advance time (at least 24 hours notice) to enable the patient to actively participate in the therapeutic choices regarding his or her state of
health.
Health care providers and professionals must use a language known to the patient and communicate in a way that is comprehensible to persons without a technical background.
In all circumstances which provide for a legal representative to give the informed consent, the patient, whether a minor or an adult unable to understand or to will, must still be as involved as possible in the decisions regarding him or her.
The informed consent of a patient must be procured on this basis.
A patient has the right to refuse a treatment or a medical intervention and to change his or her mind during the treatment, refusing its continuation. A patient has the right to refuse information about his or her health status.
5-Right to Free Choice
Each individual has the right to freely choose from among different treatment procedures and providers on the basis of adequate information. The patient has the right to decide which diagnostic exams and therapies to undergo, and which primary care doctor, specialist or hospital to use. The health services have the duty to guarantee this right, providing patients with information on the various centres and doctors able to provide a certain treatment, and on the results of their activity. They must remove any kind of obstacle limiting exercise of this right.
Ann and Margaret Kennedy believe this fundamental right has been quashed through prevarication, stalling and claiming 'ignorance'
A patient who does not have trust in his or her doctor has the right to designate another one.
Ann and Margaret Kennedy contend this should NOT take over a year and a half to deliver! it therefore contravenes their right to treatment in a timely manner consistent with their disease burden
6-Right to Privacy and Confidentiality
Every individual has the right to the confidentiality of personal information, including information regarding his or her state of health and potential diagnostic or therapeutic procedures, as well as
the protection of his or her privacy during the performance of diagnostic exams, specialist visits, and medical/surgical treatments in general.
All the data and information relative to an individual’s state of health, and to the medical/surgical treatments to which he or she is subjected, must be considered private, and as such, adequately protected.
6
Personal privacy must be respected, even in the course of medical/surgical treatments (diagnostic exams, specialist visits, medications, etc.), which must take place in an appropriate environment and in the presence of only those who absolutely need to be there (unless the patient has explicitly given consent or made a request).
7-Right to Respect of Patients’ Time
Each individual has the right to receive necessary treatment within a swift and predetermined period of time. This right applies at each phase of the treatment. The health services have the duty to fix waiting times within which certain services must be provided, on the basis of specific standards and depending on the degree of urgency of the case. Ann and Margaret Kennedy contend that this is about the most serious error of protocol within these rights for time is of the essence and the protracted prevarication to offer and deliver service has endangered both their physical health and their psychological wellbeing
The health services must guarantee each individual access to services, ensuring immediate sign-up in the case of waiting lists.
Every individual that so requests has the right to consult the waiting lists, within the bounds of respect for privacy norms.
Whenever the health services are unable to provide services within the predetermined maximum times, the possibility to seek alternative services of comparable quality must be guaranteed, and any costs borne by the patient must be reimbursed within a reasonable time. Ann and Margaret Kennedy contend that there has been NO effective oversight, care or delivery of treatments, diagnostics for the past two years and this is far too long and we have the RIGHT to seek althernative services of comparable quality and this must be guaranteed
Doctors must devote adequate time to their patients, including the time dedicated to providinginformation.
8-Right to the Observance of Quality Standards
Each individual has the right of access to high quality health services on the basis of the specification and observance of precise standards.
The right to quality health services requires that health care institutions and professionals provide satisfactory levels of technical performance, comfort and human relations.
This implies the specification, and the observance, of precise quality standards, fixed by means of a public and consultative procedure and periodically reviewed and assessed. We have been denied this right
9-Right to Safety
Each individual has the right to be free from harm caused by the poor functioning of health services, medical malpractice and errors, and the right of access to health services and treatments that meet
high safety standards.
To guarantee this right, hospitals and health services must continuously monitor risk factors and ensure that electronic medical devices are properly maintained and operators are properly trained.
All health professionals must be fully responsible for the safety of all phases and elements of a medical treatment.
we believe we have been harmed by both the delays, the hospital lack of care and lack of being allowed question the safety of all phases and elements of a medical treatment - eg sticking needles in my head forming a blood clot from a registrar who had no patients. eg not being told i had had a stroke. eg no delivery of a care plan and admitted as such from the primary consultant who has left us in a horrible situation of no care whatsoever
7
Medical doctors must be able to prevent the risk of errors by monitoring precedents and receiving continuous training. my rights to have addressed complaints made to a hospital and by a doctor have been ignored, this is wrong and violates my rights to medical safety and clarity of information and discourse and communication
Health care staff that report existing risks to their superiors and/or peers must be protected frompossible adverse consequences.
10-Right to Innovation
Each individual has the right of access to innovative procedures, including diagnostic procedures, according to international standards and independently of economic or financial considerations.
we had always known this and no one should tear asunder a process that is available in protocol of rare diseases and complex cases and prevent us from leaving the county leaving us prisoners of the state
The health services have the duty to promote and sustain research in the biomedical field, paying particular attention to rare diseases.
Research results must be adequately disseminated.
11-Right to Avoid Unnecessary Suffering and Pain
Each individual has the right to avoid as much suffering and pain as possible, in each phase of his or her illness.
The health services must commit themselves to taking all measures useful to this end, like providing
palliative treatments and simplifying patients’ access to them.
Our suffering for the past ten years with no implementation of a plan and for the past two years with no oversight, doctor and an ability to use new pathways for assessments, overviews, evaluations and diagnostics has been denied and we are in severe pain
12-Right to Personalized Treatment
Each individual has the right to diagnostic or therapeutic programmes tailored as much as possible to his or her personal needs.
The health services must guarantee, to this end, flexible programmes, oriented as much as possible to the individual, making sure that the criteria of economic sustainability does not prevail over the right to health care. we had known this to be our right
13-Right to Complain
Each individual has the right to complain whenever he or she has suffered a harm and the right to receive a response or other feedback.
The health services ought to guarantee the exercise of this right, providing (with the help of third parties) patients with information about their rights, enabling them to recognise violations and to
formalise their complaint. A complaint must be followed up by an exhaustive written response by the health service authorities
within a fixed period of time. this has been denied both Ann Kennedy and Margaret Kennedy who has received not one single response from the hospital, consultant nor the CEO or the HSE regarding our complaints, that feedback and the right to both make a complaint and receive a response. Please note there are outstanding complaints placed to the HSE itself which have received absolutely no response, investigation or feedback
8
The complaints must be made through standard procedures and facilitated by independent bodies and/or citizens’ organizations and cannot prejudice the patients’ right to take legal action or pursue alternative dispute resolution. Margaret and Ann are aware of this and we must receive due process
14-Right to Compensation
Each individual has the right to receive sufficient compensation within a reasonably short time whenever he or she has suffered physical or moral and psychological harm caused by a health
service treatment. The health services must guarantee compensation, whatever the gravity of the harm and its cause (from an excessive wait to a case of malpractice), even when the ultimate responsibility cannot be absolutely determined. Ann and Margaret Kennedy believe this to be the natural next step if by not adhering to the above and sorting our situation swiftly and well we shall activate recompensation without prejudice to the present proceedures undertaken right now.
we cannot go on indefinitely in such a manner and it has caused severe harm to us.
I wish these to be studied and by the end of this week for resolution forthwith on Neurology care input as of end of week.
unless this is forthcoming the activation of legal process will have to take place.
the denial of care, treatment and diagnostic pathways in operation is a denial of our rights and medically entraps us in a state that is inert to our issues and difficulties and causing severe harm, physical decline and psychological harm, distress and suffering.
it is untenable
1 comment:
Very useful to point out the RIGHTS we do have. We all must claim them. But before that KNOWING them. USE THEM
Post a Comment