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Troubled Irish Health Service is owed huge sums by patients



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Read more: Priests now refused access to hospital patients lists

Ireland’s beleaguered health service is owed a staggering $400million – by patients.

The Irish Examiner reports on Monday that the financially crippled HSE is owed that much in outstanding hospital patient charges.

The Health Service has stepped up debt collection in the past year but the total figure owed is now over twice the outstanding $165million in 2005.

The bulk of the money owed, some $310million, relates to outstanding private patient and road traffic accident charges.

A total of $40million is owed in statutory inpatient fees, $18million in unpaid emergency department charges and almost $6million in miscellaneous hospital patient fees.

Of the total figure, $245 million has been owed to the HSE for less than 12 months, with $75million outstanding for between 12 and 36 months and$54million owed for more than three years.

The HSE said “We are working on targeted initiatives to achieve sustained improvement in patient fee collection times.

“We are particularly keen to improve the collection of hospital charges for private patients from health insurers and is trying to agree new national protocols with the companies for this.”

The Examiner reports that the HSE has: ‘sought to agree a process with them that would provide for the payment of costs to hospitals within 30 days but it has admitted that none of the three main health insurers has responded positively to this proposal and that it continues to have to wait for up to six months for settlement of these fees’.

“In light of the economic climate facing the health services, we must move to timely payment of costs due to public hospitals with a view to protecting public services,” said a spokesman for the HSE.

Read more: Priests now refused access to hospital patients lists


Nster.com


6 Comments

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Dublinjas, just what I say, priest sends houskeeper to my shop for groceries, does not give her money to pay for them. "The big House" everyone years ago used that expression. Priests always had the biggest house in the parish, plus they did have the money. You were the eejit just like I was in those days. We did not know what was going on behind closed doors.
mamaginnty What do you mean "even the priest from the " big house " tried to dodge paying for goods". As a kid I spent two days cleaning a very large stain glass window at the back of the main altar in my local church, I risked my young life hanging off a very long ladder carrying on my window cleaning business, when it came time to pay the priest told me I would receive my payment in the next world "now clear off I'm a very busy man" Obviously he was busy assaulting some innocent at the time I called.
mamaginnty..Too many "crooks" in the kitchen..you mean ;))
Too many cooks in the kitchen, The more money they make the tighter they hold onto it. I had a small shop years ago before the supermarkets got started, the local unemployed, the man working hard to keep his family fed, etc, they all paid weekly " on the book " we called it. The ones I had keep reminding to pay were the very well off, even the priest from the " big house " tried to dodge paying for goods.
Get rid of Common purpose agents from the HSE and see the difference.
As a sovereign land where each citizen is worth $3.5 million dollars, why does any citizen owe a Gov agency anything? We pay taxes- which are unlawful, but made legal by Gov.The Patriarchal hierarchy needs to totally collapse and stop this up down system where wealth is retained by the minority while the majority sufer.In our own Irish system none of this existed because of Brehon law.
HSE- you cannot bleed stones.
 




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