In Lloyd B. Smith’s column titled “To Resign or not Resign” was published in the Jamaica Observer of Friday, 13 May 2018. Though I agree with the principle of a
leader taking responsibility for his actions, I believe calls for the health
minister, Dr. Christopher Tufton, to resign “in the wake of the Cornwall
Regional Hospital debacle” are unfounded.
For
instance, calls by the opposition’s spokesman on health, Dr. Dayton Campbell,
focus solely on Dr. Tufton’s decision not to close Cornwall Regional Hospital
(CRH). But, has he or any other asked how CRH – one of the most modern of
public health facilities in the island – come to be in a state that would
require it to be closed?
Clearly
maintenance, or rather the lack thereof, is at fault. But, it may also be
argued that the lack of user fees has contributed to the ineffective maintenance
of this building. This would again cast blame squarely at Dr. Tufton, if it
could be proved that this did not exist before. I contend that Dr. Tufton’s
predecessors are equally to blame.
In the late
1980’s – approximately 30 years ago – I was part of a team involving the
Ministry of Construction (Works) and Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO)
which inspected hospitals islandwide, including CRH, to evaluate the state of
the nation’s primary healthcare facilities. The finding was that poor
maintenance was the main problem.
This finding
was presented to the Ministry of Health at the time, which was prior to their
commencement of the Hospital Restoration Programme (HRP). The study singled out
poorly trained maintenance personnel and inadequate resources being allocated
to maintenance. The records should indicate what was done with this information.
The present
circumstance would seem to indicate that whatever may have been done was still
inadequate. So rather than a “Culture of Ethics” being a problem, what needs to
be addressed is a culture of poor maintenance. The older hospitals were
designed to be naturally ventilated, not CRH. So, maintenance of this facility
is more critical.
A number of
floors were renovated at CRH under the HRP. Of all Dr. Tufton’s predecessors at
time, who can wash their hands of any responsibility regarding maintenance of
this facility, and maintenance of the island’s healthcare facilities in
general? The opportunity now exists for Dr. Tufton to make sure this situation
is not repeated at any other facility.
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