Jamaica Gleaner

DOCS WELL AGAIN

Ministry yields after contracts sickout

- By Janet Silvera, Carl Gilchrist and Christophe­r Thomas

WESTERN BUREAU:

THE HOLNESS administra­tion bowed to a daylong sickout and gruelling latenight talks over a contracts dispute that threatened to make more than 140 junior doctors jobless.

The healthcare system ground to a halt on Thursday as a sickout by 548 junior doctors set off alarm bells at hospitals, with only emergency cases being seen. They got 1/5th of their demands, The Gleaner understand­s.

“The meetings today were fruitful, with a better understand­ing of the issues on both sides,” Health Minister Christophe­r Tufton told The Gleaner on Thursday night.

“The short-term contract issues were sorted out, and both sides agreed to continuing talking on other issues.”

In a press statement just before press time, the MOH said normal operations would resume at health facilities islandwide effective 8 a.m. today.

The decision was reached following a meeting of senior executives of the health ministry and members of the Jamaica Medical Doctors’ Associatio­n (JMDA) over Thursday’s high rate of absenteeis­m.

Their action saw senior medical officers and technocrat­s in some of the country’s largest medical facilities admitting that they could not guarantee continued services owing to the exhaustion of consultant­s.

“The consultant­s alone cannot carry the full magnitude of service. If in the next 48 hours, the situation has not been resolved, I don’t know what we are going to do,” senior medical officer at Mandeville Regional, Dr Everton McIntosh, told The Gleaner.

Only 488 doctors of the 1,036 turned up for work on Thursday, while the others fought for confirmati­on of pre-negotiated heads of agreement and an end to fixedterm contracts devoid of benefits.

Tagging the six-month contracts exploitati­ve, JMDA President Dr Mindi Fitz-Henley said it was a tactic to bypass the negotiatin­g table. She argued that they would only accept two- to three-year contracts.

In the meantime, their actions on the day recognised internatio­nally as Doctor’s Day resulted in the cancellati­on of the clinics and non-emergency services and elective surgeries at the St Ann’s Regional Hospital.

Ninety-eight of the 108 doctors who generally serve patients at the St Ann’s Bay facility stayed away, the hospital’s chief executive officer, Dennis Morgan, told The Gleaner, noting that only 10 consultant­s remained on the job.

“It is not the coverage to the extent which we normally provide on a daily basis to our patients, but nonetheles­s, given the situation, we are managing and we will take it day by day,” he added.

In the western region, which includes Cornwall Regional Hospital, only 66 of the 245 doctors were absent.

But that offered no solace to

patients who were forced to leave frustrated.

That included a 75-year-old woman, who gave her name only as Ms Duncan.

“We waited for six hours, and at 12:30, I got to go to the pharmacy, but we are still here as we did not get through. My husband is at the pharmacy now, but they put him off till November, and he is in pain,” she lamented.

Medical students were also unable to complete their training regimen because of the cancellati­on of clinical rotations.

Mahesh Dayyala, a medical student from the All American Institute of Medical Sciences i n Black River, St Elizabeth, said that the sickout severely restricted operations at CRH, where he is an intern.

“It is really hard as I was planning to work here in Jamaica, but I am having second thoughts now,” said Dayyala.

Optimistic that progress was being made between his ministry and the junior doctors, Tufton said the regional health authoritie­s would make adjustment­s to the contracts policy.

Other issues surroundin­g employment would be resolved in good faith later, he said.

“Up to this time, we have demonstrat­ed mutual respect, and that is what is required to come to a resolution,” he said.

 ?? GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR ?? Barrington Facey (right) and common-law wife Veronica Morgan at the Kingston Public Hospital on Thursday. They, like many others, were unable to be treated as a result of a daylong sickout by junior doctors.
GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR Barrington Facey (right) and common-law wife Veronica Morgan at the Kingston Public Hospital on Thursday. They, like many others, were unable to be treated as a result of a daylong sickout by junior doctors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica