This article is from page 8 of the 2008-04-08 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 8 JPG
THE mother of three who suffered a cancer misdiagnosis has issued a heartfelt plea to the HSE’s chief ex- ecutive to ensure no woman is ever put in such a life-threatening situa- tion again.
In an open letter to professor Brendan Drumm, Rebecca O’ Malley launched a damning attack on the Health Services Executive. Rebecca,
from Ballina/Killaloe, was wrongly given the all-clear after tests for breast cancer in 2005 at the Mid- West Regional Hospital in Limerick and Cork University Hospital.
The misdiagnosis led to a potential- ly lethal 14-month delay in starting treatment for her condition. The 42- year-old went public on the mistake, which led to an investigation and re- port by the Health Information Qual- ity Authority (HIQA), the results
of which were published last week. The misdiagnosis was due to an er- ror, but could have been put right if the hospitals had used the recom- mended multi-disciplinary review of her case.
In her letter, Mrs O’Malley chal- lenges the HSE to name the rec- ommendations of the HIQA Which it says have already been implemented. She also calls for the appointment of an official to ensure
that all 15 recommendations are put in place.
Mrs O’Malley asks Dr Drumm to “please learn from the mistake and take us all into your confidence by adopting a new form of communica- tion with your patients”.
After the publication of the report last week, the Tipperary woman said she feels “achingly sad at the breadth and extent of the institution- al deficiencies which let me and my family down so badly and exposed me to such grievous and continu- ing danger. I am now left with vivid mental images of surgeons blindly poking their fine needles into pa- tients’ breasts without always having the obvious and beneficial assistance of ultra-sound equipment to guide their hands.”
The HSE said that it “accepts the report’s 15 recommendations which relate to clinical and process issues, a number of which have already been implemented and others are in the process of being implemented. Their implementation will be overseen by the National Director of the National Hospitals Office working with the Director of the Cancer Control Pro- rea: beeu selon
Commenting on this report and a separate report into procedures for breast treatment at Barringtons, Health Minister Mary Harney said she is “determined that each of these reports will lead to improved stand- ards of patient safety and patient care in all healthcare settings”.