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06 Sept 2025

INMO demands action following latest 'truly shocking' hospital trolley figures

Letterkenny had 2nd highest number waiting on hospital beds this morning

General File pic: Hospital trolley beds

Extraordinary steps need to be taken to address imminent dangerous levels of overcrowding in hospitals, according to the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation

Latest figures show that 747 patients, including 32 children, have been admitted to hospital without a bed on Monday according to the INMO.

Among the hospitals worst affected are University Hospital Limerick with 109 patients waiting for a bed. Letterkenny University Hospital has 57 waiting, while there are 54 at Sligo University Hospital, and 50 at St James's Hospital in Dublin.

Twelve children at the National Children's Hospital in Tallaght are waiting for a bed, with ten at CHI Temple Street and nine at CHI Crumlin, according to the INMO's TrolleyWatch figures released on Monday.

Commenting on the figures, INMO General Secretary Phil Ní Sheaghdha said: “Today’s trolley figures are truly shocking and should be a wake up call to the Health Service Executive, the Government and individual hospital groups that extraordinary steps must be taken to ensure that we are not replicating the same record breaking trolley numbers we saw at the beginning of this year.

“The HSE must take action in the form of accelerating the use of private hospital beds, the immediate cancellation of all non-urgent elective activity and the introduction of heightened infection control measures in all hospitals.

“We are today seeking urgent engagement with the CEO of the HSE and the Minister for Health to discuss what measures can be taken this week to protect the dignity of sick patients and the safety of nurses who are trying to provide care in suboptimal conditions.

 “The INMO has been warning that dangerous levels of overcrowding were imminent. There is still time to avoid intolerable levels of overcrowding ahead of Christmas and the New Year if action is taken now,” Ms Ní Sheaghdha said. 

 

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