Resigned HSE director Tony O'BrienRollingNews

Tony O'Brien, the Director of Ireland's Health Service Executive (HSE) has resigned in the midst of the Cervical Check scandal, which has seen 17 women die after false pap smear results and delayed diagnoses for many more. 

O'Brien, who was already set to retire in July, has been Director General of the HSE since 2013. 

He has been under pressure to step down ever since the full scope of the Cervical Check scandal, under which pap smears of Irish women were outsourced to a lab in the US to deal with a backlog and then not tested thoroughly enough for accurate results, emerged. 

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Thus far, 17 Irish women who received false negatives on their pap smear results have died

When the issue became known to the lab and the HSE, women who'd received false results were not informed of the error in time, and to date 208 did not receive the information in enough time to take preventative measures. 

In a statement released by the HSE, O'Brien said that he’d made his decision "in order to avoid any further impact to the delivery of health and social care services, and in particular, the cancer screening services that have become the focus of intense political debate in recent days".

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He said he was confident that an official review underway "will demonstrate the quality and value of the CervicalCheck programme once it is complete."