High numbers of people are presenting at emergency departments with Covid-19, according to the Health Service Executive's Chief Operations Officer.
Speaking on RTÉ's News at One, Anne O'Connor said Covid-19 "hasn't gone away" from a health service perspective. "Notwithstanding the good news, in terms of people being out and about and being able to live their lives a bit more now, we still have 885 people in hospital today with Covid, so it hasn't gone away from a health service perspective, although it is a reduced figure to where we would have been a few weeks ago." Ms O'Connor said the level of unscheduled care in hospitals remains "very, very high". "We can't ignore the fact that we still have Covid in our hospitals, and we still have very high numbers of people coming to our emergency departments.
So even today, we're very, very high. We're as high now as we were in the bad flu season two years ago in terms of our unscheduled care." She added that over 8,000 health service staff remain out of work due to Covid and said virus has also had a "significant impact" on waiting lists.
She said that some improvements had been made regarding waiting times for inpatients and procedures such as scopes. "This is for people who are awaiting colonoscopies and other scopes, which are very, very important in terms of helping us diagnose illnesses and we saw that number reduced from about 36,000 to 27,000." However, waiting times for outpatient services grew. "The big, big number that we talked about in terms of waiting lists is always our outpatient list and we started last year with just under 623,000.