A busy hospital pleaded with gardaí to provide more patrols because of open drug dealing in their emergency department, rising antisocial behaviour, and a failure to provide a proper handover for patients that were being dropped off by police.
The Mater hospital in Dublin also raised serious concerns over its centre for nurses education, which it said had become a magnet for drug and alcohol abuse and was being burgled at least twice every year.
In an email to An Garda Síochána in July, the Mater management said they were extremely worried about their nurses education centre – close by the main hospital – saying they were regularly having to move on drug users from the exterior basement.
They said hospital maintenance had been forced to gate up external storage areas, and that cleaners were regularly removing abandoned bedding and alcohol cans.
Apple MacBook Pro M4 review: A great option, but only if you actually need the power of the Pro
Why I’m happy not to be an alpha male
Dave Hannigan: Katie Taylor’s presence lends a modicum of dignity to sporting farrago
The Music Quiz: Harry Styles sings about what type of restaurant on his 2022 album Harry’s House?
The email said: “This area is being accessed via the fire access stairs at the front of the building. Unfortunately, we are unable to chain this access point due to fire safety regulations.”
In their correspondence, the management provided the dates of five incidents in the space of three weeks where security staff were forced to intervene for safety reasons.
They said the education centre was intended to be a safe learning environment for young students, and that it also housed locker rooms for students on its basement floor.
The head of security asked if gardaí could carry out regular patrols in the area to help provide a “much-needed sense of safety and reassurance” to their young students.
[ Mater hospital accounts show accumulated deficit in excess of €22mOpens in new window ]
Separately, the Mater also asked for a meeting with gardaí in mid-June due to rising concerns over safety, particularly in their accident and emergency department.
A copy of an email, released under Freedom of Information, flagged a number of concerns including “patients being brought to … A&E but no handover is being provided to hospital staff” as well as “increasing levels of drug dealing and antisocial behaviour at the Mater ED (emergency department)”.
[ Stephen Termini advises Helen McEntee to increase garda patrols in city centreOpens in new window ]
A hospital spokesperson said: “The [Mater’s] number one priority is the safety of our patients and our staff. Prior to the onset of Covid-19, An Garda Síochána had a visible presence on our campus as part of our endeavours to ensure a safe and welcoming environment for everyone at the hospital.
“Since the lifting of the last of the Covid restrictions on visiting at the hospital, this has now been reinstated. The Mater welcomes this important partnership with the Gardaí and their support in ensuring a safe environment for all who work, visit or are inpatients at the hospital.”