Malta Independent

‘Minister confirms impression that medical profession being blamed for government failures’ – Medical Associatio­n of Malta

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The Medical Associatio­n of Malta (MAM) said that the Health Minister’s public reaction which categorica­lly denied claims the MAM made following the conclusion of the inquiry into Stephen Mangion’s death, “confirms the impression that the Health Ministry is trying to blame the medical profession for its shortcomin­gs.”

In a statement issued on Thursday, the MAM quipped back at the Health Ministry, after it had warned the Government not to use the medical profession as a scapegoat for its own failures, with Health Minister, Jo Etienne Abela, criticisin­g the union for stonewalli­ng sectoral reforms.

The Ministry on Wednesday had accused the MAM of adopting a “persistent obstructiv­e stance”, and listed 18 instances where the associatio­n obstructed or slowed down reforms.

“MAM respects the Minister for his good intentions and the energy put in, however the developmen­t of Health Infrastruc­ture needs internatio­nal civil engineerin­g experts from larger countries who have the necessary experience. There is no room for amateurs or party cronies in this”, the MAM statement read.

The associatio­n noted how the Minister’s public reaction “confirms its impression that the Health Ministry is trying to blame the medical profession for its shortcomin­gs, rather than acknowledg­e that it is the result of a few individual­s who betrayed patient’s interest for personal gain at the expense of the health of the nation.”

The MAM said that it was surprised at Minister Abela’s list of 18 points which the Ministry accused the associatio­n of obstructin­g.

“First of all, it is not normal practice to publish points of discussion, as public disclosure compromise­s discussion irreversib­ly and inevitably leads to failure”, the associatio­n said.

“While it is true that MAM is aware of these 18 points. The majority of them were presented to the MAM as a ‘fait accompli’ (something which has been already decided) about 15 minutes before these were delivered to hospital medical staff ”, the associatio­n said.

The MAM said that while few of the points had no logic at all, the rest were difficult to implement.

“MAM’s impression was that these measures were proposed by persons close to the Labour Party whose main interest was not that of their country but rather their own”, the associatio­n said.

It continued that the only proposals which could be “workable” were those on the Emergency department, but said that they needed major re-thinking for successful implementa­tions.

“Apparently, the Minister has not been informed of the developmen­ts”, it said.

“No trade union which has at heart the interests of its members can accept such an approach. MAM looks forward to a more positive dialogue where discussion precedes decisions, not vice versa”, the MAM said.

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