(Trinidad Guardian) Hospitals are becoming “home” for some—including children at Carnival time.
Some parents deliberately dose their children with Brooklax laxative, take them to hospitals for “diarrhoea” treatment and leave them there when they want to fete for Carnival, Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh said on Friday.
“…They induce diarrhoea, go to the Accident and Emergency unit complaining of this and you have to keep the child! There’s no law against giving your child a laxative on Carnival Friday, but because this public health system is free, it’s abused,” Deyalsingh told Parliament.
Replying to Opposition questions, Deyalsingh confirmed that across the health sector there are currently 51 people who are “long-stay patients.” This includes 18 at the San Fernando General Hospital. There are none at Port-of-Spain General Hospital.
Deyalsingh said the maximum time-frame a person can be treated at a public hospital varies depending on a diagnosis. But he said people “living” at hospitals are left there by their families, “because their families don’t want to take care of them at home.”
“Across the health system there are 51 long-stay patients. (But) that’s the size of a small private hospital! Do you know of any small private hospital with 51 beds that will continue to provide free health care for persons?” he asked.
“This doesn’t consider the patients who stay there. But when we call people’s children (telling them) ‘Come collect your mother, come collect your father,’ they don’t come. I see the MP for Fyzabad (Dr Lackram Bodoe) nodding his head.”
Deyalsingh added, “What do we do? You leave them there because we can’t throw them into the streets! You make some arrangements with the Social Development Ministry and if there’s space they can be accommodated.
“But what T&T needs to be told is that Christmas and Carnival are when people take their parents to be housed at public expense in public hospitals because they want to go ‘up North’ for Christmas.
“And for Carnival, they start to dump their children on the public health system from Carnival Friday. They don’t come Carnival Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday. But miraculously they appear to collect their children on Ash Wednesday. And the taxpayer picks up the bill—that’s what this free health system does.”
On similar mental health issues, Deyalsingh said, “The way this country has dealt with mental health at St Ann’s is cultural—an absolute tragedy.”
He said the St Ann’s Hospital is a holding bay “warehousing” patients. He said the creation of a Mental Health director—who’d decentralise services—has been approved and “warehousing” at taxpayers’ expense would end. He said patients would receive family support if treated in their community.
Social Development Minister Cherie Ann Crichlow-Cockburn said 45 socially displaced people were removed from T&T’s streets between September 2015 and January and are currently housed at the Riverside Centre, Port-of-Spain.