Review of Dublin ambulance service not suspended, HSE says

Review proceeding as planned ‘contrary’ to Siptu statements, Executive says

The review of Dublin’s emergency ambulance service is proceeding as planned and has not been suspended, the HSE said today.

It said "contrary" to statements by the trade union Siptu yesterday, that the review had been "suspended", it had commenced and would be completed. It said time-frames had been "revised" however.

A joint HSE/Dublin City Council review of the emergency ambulance service was announced last month. It is being conducted by Martin Flaherty, chief executive of the Association of Ambulance Chief Executives (Aace) in England and by Derek Brady, former county manager in Dun Laoghaire Rathdown and was due to be completed by the end of May.

When announced many immediately saw it as a precursor to the removal of Dublin's ambulance service from Dublin Fire Brigade (DFB_.

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Most of Dublin’s emergency ambulance service is provided by DFB, on behalf of Dublin City Council, with the HSE’s National Ambulance Service providing the service outside Dublin.

At last month's Dublin City council meeting councillors voted for a suspension of the ambulance review until the HSE's national capacity review of ambulance services throughout the State – including in Dublin – was completed. Despite the vote city manager Owen Keegan said he would "ignore" the will of the councillors and press ahead with the review.

The emergence of a confidential HSE document, outlining plans to remove the ambulance service from DFB "by the end of 2015" heightened fears among DFB staff. At a demonstration in Dublin yesterday by up to 500 DFB fire-fighter paramedics, Patricia King, vice-president of Siptu, said Mr Keegan had "suspended " the joint review.

She said “on foot of the extraordinary campaign” by DFB workers Siptu had been contacted by Mr Keegan. “He said he will suspend the review until such time as the [HSE’S]National Ambulance Service capacity review is complete. That, colleagues, is no doubt on foot of listening to yourselves and listening to the message you have given loudly.”

However, in a statement issued today the HSE said: “Despite comments to the contrary, the review of the provision of ambulance services by Dublin Fire Brigade in Dublin City and Dublin County has NOT [HSE’s emphasis] been suspended.

“In consultation with Dublin City Council, the timescales have been revised in order to allow the results of the HSE National Ambulance Capacity Review to inform the recommendations of the Dublin Fire Brigade Review”

The national review, which is being also being conducted by Aace, is underway with no estimated date for completion. In a recent interview with The Irish Times, Martin Dunne, director of the NAS, said there would be "a long time-span" on the national review "because we want it done properly and the data analysed properly. It has never been done before in this country".

Kitty Holland

Kitty Holland

Kitty Holland is Social Affairs Correspondent of The Irish Times