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New IMO President warns ‘productivity’ focus won’t fix hospital capacity deficit

By Reporter - 09th Apr 2026

Capacity deficit
Prof Matthew Sadlier

The incoming President of the IMO has warned that a focus on productivity in healthcare will not address overstretched hospital capacity and poor workforce planning, which are putting patient welfare at risk.
 
Prof Matthew Sadlier, who is a consultant psychiatrist, made the warning as the IMO AGM begins today (Thursday 9 April) in Killarney, Co Kerry.
 
He said that the IMO supported the idea of an extended health service in theory.

However, Prof Sadlier added it is impossible to deliver this without putting in place fit-for-purpose workforce planning and bed capacity.

He stated that 5,000 additional hospital beds were needed as an urgent priority.
 
“Every year the IMO warns that we do not have the bed numbers or healthcare staff to deliver an optimal health service for patients, and the recent focus on productivity in healthcare will not paper over the cracks that are endemic in the system,” according to Prof Sadlier.
 
He noted that the theme of the AGM is quality, excellence, and delivery.

“We believe in these critically important healthcare tenets and would warn against a numbers game as we treat patients. If doctors are compelled to work with one eye on the clock, then we will inevitably sacrifice the quality care that is already being affected by our lack of beds and staff. No amount of increased investment in productivity or efficiencies will make up for the fact that we don’t have enough hospital beds to satisfy the predictable health needs of the population.

Prof Sadlier noted that last month marked 20 years since the then Minister for Health, Mary Harney, declared a national emergency in relation to overcrowding in hospital emergency departments (EDs).

“It is profoundly depressing that the conditions in EDs, which warranted the calling of an emergency then, have not moved to what is required to manage the needs of patients today,” he said.
 
“Two decades on from 2006, there is still a national emergency in our EDs but the state of emergency has now spread out to the public hospital system generally. Hospitals are overcrowded year-round, elective surgeries are cancelled in ever increasing numbers and waiting lists have exploded. While there has been a substantial increase in annual spending on healthcare, this has been more than matched by the increase in our population and the growth in our elderly population, along with advances in medicine which in and of themselves are expensive. 
 
“We are now seeing the usual headlines of overspend in the HSE and while we must all ensure value for money, we do need to critically examine the actual cost of delivering a modern health service and have honest conversations as to how that can be achieved.  We cannot keep promising better if we are not willing to pay for it.”

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