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DLP complains about wait times, incomplete renovations in QEH A&E

by Randy Bennett
3 min read
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Wait times at the Accident and Emergency Department (A&E) at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH) are still too long, the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) has complained.

The party’s spokesperson on health Paul Gibson lamented that people were waiting in excess of two days to be seen by a doctor, even though millions of dollars had been spent on refurbishing the A&E Department.

“We have a situation in Barbados where it is now taking between 48 and 49 hours in our A&E to be seen. Now, there is something called an accident and there is something called an emergency and it is no longer an accident or an emergency when 24 hours have passed, and this is something that we have to be very mindful of,” he said during a press conference at the DLP George Street headquarters on Friday.

“You have a lot of 85-year-olds and 75-year-olds sitting in a waiting room, sometimes falling and collapsing on the ground in the A&E Department waiting to be seen by a doctor, and there is a reason why it is happening.”

Gibson said the Government had not delivered on its promise to fully renovate the department, as the old A&E section remained incomplete.

He said the Government needed to prioritise finishing the project.

“The Government is finding money to build a Golden Square, they are finding money to build a Heroes’ Park, but you mean they can’t find money to build or repair the second part of the A&E Department? It is heartbreaking that Government can find money to fly and stay in luxurious hotels in Egypt, in South Africa and carry a large 24-person contingent to these functions and spend large sums of money and can’t find enough money to fix something as fundamental as a hospital,” Gibson contended.

Also speaking at the press conference was the DLP’s spokesperson on education, Melissa Savoury who described the performance of Minister of Education, Technological and Vocational Training, Kay McConney as lacklustre.

DLP spokesperson on education, Melissa Savoury.

She questioned why the 2023 National Grooming Policy was released the day before the start of the new school term, and without alerting teachers.

“Why did we wait until the night before school starts to send off something like that when parents would have already prepped their children, parents would have already taken their sons to the barber to get their hair cut?

“I agree that a new policy is needed and necessary given the diversity of our society … but it is understood that, as usual, our teachers were left in the dark to only find out like everybody else about these new grooming policies. Once again, the ministry continues to show a lack of respect to our teachers, a lack of respect to our parents and a lack of respect in general,” Savoury said.

She said another area of concern is teachers and principals acting in posts, noting that 10 principals and 18 acting deputy principals are currently acting in their positions. (RB)

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