Hospitals risk a shortage of vital medical devices without urgent action, Deirdre Clune has warned. Following the PIP breast implant scandal, an updated EU law demanded that all medical devices be registered on a new system. It was designed to be more accountable to reassure patients and doctors. It takes up to 18 months to certify a device. The deadline, May 2024, is now only 18 months away. With time running out, only around 15 per cent of devices, such as heart valves and catheters, have so far been registered. Fine Gael MEP, Deirdre Clune, says, unless a solution is found, our healthcare system will lose vital devices patients urgently need.
Out words: Medical treatments
Dur: 0’22”
”Outrageous” LGBTI families face citizenship struggles
Rainbow families denied freedom of movement – Walsh
Step towards Russia facing international tribunal - Fitzgerald
European Parliament calls Russia a terrorist state
Women on boards to become EU law
Supporting migrants “runs through Irish DNA” - Andrews
EU reform key to sorting migration - Andrews
Russian ships monitoring Irish cables - Kelleher
New law to beef up infrastructure protection
FG MEP criticises Irish government over energy
Irish windfall must go to most in need - Kelly
Brave footballers praised, England criticised
COP deal will hit our pockets – O’Sullivan
O’Sullivan urges fossil fuel end despite COP
Interview Kelleher on EU Industrial Emissions Directive
MEP calls for revision of EU Industrial Emissions Directive – Kelleher
Livestock permit proposals could jeopardise “viability of farms” – Kelleher MEP
Interview Clune MEP on increased EU Health cooperation
More EU cross-border cooperation needed on health – Clune
Interview Kelly MEP on energy crisis
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free