Sunday Independent (Ireland)

ANATOMY OF THE AGREEMENT

The pressing need for a new maternity hospital may yet be sacrificed to outrage over the fact that nuns will own it, writes Maeve Sheehan

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EVERY time the health watchdog dispatches its inspectors to the National Maternity Hospital on Holles Street in Dublin, the conditions get worse. Inspectors have repeatedly warned of the dangers of packing ever increasing numbers of expectant mothers and infants into the dilapidate­d 19th century structure.

Most recently, they found the intensive care unit filled with 46 babies when it was designed to care for 36 and “poor hygiene” on the delivery ward. The building is no longer fit for purpose and the Master of the National \ Maternity Hospital, Dr Rhona Mahony, has pleaded with inspectors to “acknowledg­e the context of our challenges”.

The National Maternity Hospital has been fighting for a new home for two decades. So it was smiles all around at a press conference hosted by Health Minister Simon Harris last November to announce that a new National Maternity Hospital would be built on St Vincent’s Healthcare Group’s Elm Park campus.

Mahony and the chair of St Vincent’s, Jimmy Menton, posed for photograph­s. A press release outlined all the details — even the bit that the National Maternity Hospital would become a subsidiary of a healthcare empire owned by nuns.

The news was duly reported without a ripple of protest. Months passed. The remains of dead babies were discovered in a disused tank at a former mother and baby home in Tuam. Religious orders came under scrutiny once again.

Last week, the rehoming of Ireland’s National Maternity Hospital was recast to seismic effect; the State was gifting the hospital to a religious order that has yet to cough up the €3m it owes the State in redress for survivors of abuse in its institutio­ns.

The simmering debate about Church and State boiled over with such a vengeance that the deal brokered over five months of tortuous negotiatio­ns is in now jeopardy.

Protesters gathered outside the Department of Health and more than 78,000 people signed an online petition to stop the Religious Sisters of Charity from becoming owners of the National Maternity Hospital.

Two of the country’s most prominent obstetrici­ans — who also happen to be related by marriage — seem pitted against each other.

Peter Boylan, a former Master of Holles Street and a director on the board of governors, has repeatedly raised concerns about the Catholic ownership of a State maternity hospital required to perform procedures forbidden under Catholic ethos. Boylan says St Vincent’s already precludes from performing tubal ligations and vasectomie­s because of its Catholic ethos. As he put it last week: “It’s a maternity hospital. Being given to the nuns. Come on.”

His interventi­on prompted an impassione­d and angry response from Mahony, who lamented his “inaccuraci­es” and “misinforma­tion” and spoke of the urgent need for a hospital that is fit for purpose for women.

Over at Elm Park, rumours emanated from the executive corridors of St Vincent’s Healthcare Group that the executives were furious and having second thoughts about the deal. The Sisters were said to be feeling particular­ly aggrieved.

Boylan’s interventi­on did not help, but the last straw was Harris’s turn on the RTE news last Thursday, demanding “assurances” that there would be “no religious interferen­ce” in the maternity hospital, having six months earlier declared himself “thrilled” with the nuns’ involvemen­t. On Friday, Menton issued a statement suggesting that the St Vincent’s group was considerin­g pulling out because of “the controvers­y and misinforma­tion” and “the views expressed” by the health minister and other members of the Oireachtas.

“The whole deal is now at a critical juncture,” said one informed source. “It’s not as though they wanted the National Maternity Hospital in the first place. They were doing the State a favour.”

The Religious Sisters of Charity, which owns and controls one of the biggest healthcare providers in Ireland, is dying out. At the last count in 2009, there were 264 nuns, with only 15 aged under 60. Their empire spans hospitals, nursing homes, hospices and counsellin­g services in Dublin and around the country controlled through 10 different companies. The biggest is St Vincent’s Healthcare Group which encompasse­s the public and private hospital on the Elm Park site.

The nuns have relinquish­ed management of the group to executives but are still involved. The hospitals operate according to the nuns’ principles and values.

Sister Agnes Reynolds and Sister Mary Benton, both in their 70s, represent the order on the board. The order’s 100 shareholdi­ng is registered to Sister Mary Fahy and Sister Eileen Mary Durack.

According to financial statements, which the order submitted to justify its contributi­ons to the Redress Scheme, the Religious Sisters of Charity owned property and investment­s worth €266m in 2009, €233m was tied up in land and buildings and €32.8m in ‘financial assets’. Its cars were worth €400,000.

The order cannot sell the healthcare businesses, or draw dividends from them, and if any were to be liquidated, their assets would transfer to a similar charity, according to the 2009 report.

When the St Vincent’s group came under pressure to share its hospital campus with the maternity hospital, sources said the nuns were willing but their executives were distinctly lukewarm.

The voluntary hospital group which guards its independen­ce has been battling to restructur­e its debt. It has a toxic relationsh­ip with the Health Service Executive — it came under fire for mortgaging the publicly funded hospital to build the private hospital and was accused of breaching public pay rules.

“SVHCG was not at all interested in taking on the maternity hospital. There was no prestige attached to it. At the end of the day, there wasn’t much in it for them. Their view was we are not asking for this to be put on our campus. But if Holles Street want to come on our campus, they are going to have to engage on our terms,” said one informed source.

Talks started and failed. Two mediators came and went. Kieran Mulvey was the Department of Health’s third and last shot. The deal he later brokered over five months last year made clear to both sides that this was the “final opportunit­y” to reach agreement on the project.

A profession­al negotiator, Mulvey is the retired head of the Workplace Relations Commission and the Government’s Mr Fixit.

He knocked a deal together in five months, over a series of initially frosty meetings that gradually softened into a working relationsh­ip, usually in the neutral venue of University College Dublin.

The unpublishe­d 25-page agreement, seen by the Sunday Independen­t, lists the central issues related to “future governance, identity, autonomy, ownership, shared services, clinical governance, operationa­l management, site acquisitio­n and constructi­on management of the new facility”. The issue of the nuns’ debt to the State redress scheme didn’t arise, as it wasn’t in the terms of reference.

St Vincent’s conceded to the maternity hospital having its own chief executive or master, but it insisted on having “oversight” of the hospital, given that it would be bang in the middle of its campus. Mulvey’s solution was to incorporat­e the maternity hospital as a new company, its independen­ce protected by ministeria­l veto and ‘reserved powers’. But St Vincent’s would own the company. The board would be drawn 50/50 from St Vincent’s and the National Maternity Hospital and one independen­t obstetrics expert.

The final unpublishe­d agreement lists eight areas in which “reserved powers are to be exercised by all of the directors”. Included is the “clinical and operationa­l independen­ce” that is “without religious, ethnic or other distinctio­n”. They also provide for the hospital controllin­g and protecting its own budget.

The Master of the National Maternity Hospital will become clinical director for obstetric services across the group, reporting to the group clinical director or the group medical board.

The maternity hospital will be “physically connected” to St Vincent’s University Hospital, so that consultant­s and staff can move freely from one to the other. Patients will transfer “seamlessly” from one hospital to another, to protect patient care.

Mahony said the triple lock of controls was sufficient — ownership was “not really here or there”.

But it is on the question of ownership that the hardfought agreement is now unravellin­g. The controvers­y, if anything, has escalated with some politician­s now demanding that the State seize St Vincent’s lands. The group board is expected to meet to discuss whether it will continue to stand by the project.

‘The Religious Sisters of Charity is dying out. At the last count in 2009, there were only 15 nuns under 60’

 ?? Maeve Sheehan and Philip Ryan ??
Maeve Sheehan and Philip Ryan
 ??  ?? CAMPUS: The St Vincent’s Healthcare Group encompasse­s both the private hospital and the public hospital on its site on Merrion Road, Dublin
CAMPUS: The St Vincent’s Healthcare Group encompasse­s both the private hospital and the public hospital on its site on Merrion Road, Dublin
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