Irish Medical Lives

By: Chris Luke
  • Summary

  • Hosted by Dr Chris Luke, Irish Medical Lives is a podcast that features conversations with the most inspirational movers, shakers and pioneers of Irish Medicine in the 21st Century.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Chris Luke
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Episodes
  • Ep. 13 Irish Medical Lives with Dr.Chris Luke
    Dec 3 2024
    Professor Trevor Duffy, Consultant Rheumatologist at Connolly Hospital Blanchardstown in Dublin, is one of the best known ‘medical politicians’ of his generation, having started his political career as an NCHD during the health service disputes of the late 1990s and risen through the ranks to become President of the Irish Medical Organisation, in 2014. In this episode, the remarkably self-deprecating physician recalls his early years in Kilmacud and a small rural town in Iran, his time as the first Chief Resident in St Vincent’s University Hospital in Dublin and then Chef de Clinique in Geneva’s University Hospital, and his serendipitous route through an MBA to becoming Director of Healthcare Leadership at the Royal College of Physicians in Ireland. En route, we hear about the importance of mentors and good professional relationships, the vital role of teamwork, and the necessity of ‘dust-gathering reports’. Describing himself as a bit of a contrarian, he offers a case for following ‘the road less travelled’ (to Europe) and remembers how a ‘can-do’ attitude led to his transforming a hospital bathroom into an elegant office, with a little help from family and friends.

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    45 mins
  • Ep. 20 Irish Medical Lives with Dr Chris Luke
    Apr 22 2024

    Dr Fergal Hickey, emeritus consultant in emergency medicine in Sligo University Hospital, where he was first appointed in 1995, is someone’s whose voice is familiar to every radio listener and TV viewer who is concerned with the functioning and state of Ireland’s emergency departments.


    At a national level, as well as being the official spokesman for his speciality, Fergal has long been primus inter pares, as it were, or the most prominent Irish emergency physician of his generation: in short, he has been President of the Irish Association for Emergency Medicine on no fewer than three periods between 2005 and 2022. Dr Hickey was a founding member of the working party for the national Emergency Medicine Programme and a Board Member of the International Federation for Emergency Medicine, and he has been the national director for the Advanced Trauma Life Support Programme in Ireland since 2006. In 2012, Fergal was awarded the Fellowship of the International Federation for Emergency Medicine in recognition of his contribution to international emergency medicine, and he received the Gautam Bodiwala Lifetime Achievement Award from the IFEM in 2023.


    In Autumn 2022, Dr Hickey memorably told the Irish media that the coming Winter would be “hell on earth” for both patients and hospital staff, if official projections for hospital and ICU admissions were correct. Hospital emergency departments had become “warehouses for admitted patients”, he said, and to make matters worse, staff didn’t want to work in a broken system, and as a result, the health service was “haemorrhaging” healthcare professionals.


    This podcast is genuinely essential listening for anyone hoping for a better emergency healthcare ecosystem in this country.


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    52 mins
  • Ep. 19 Irish Medical Lives with Dr Chris Luke
    Apr 5 2024

    Professor Garry Courtney, Consultant Gastroenterologist and Clinical Director at St. Luke’s Hospital, Kilkenny, is National Clinical Lead in the Acute Medicine Programme, Regional Programme Director for BST/HST at the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland, and Treasurer of the Irish Society of Gastroenterology.


    In this episode, Garry explains his close connections with the Tyrone Gaelic Football team, why he came to be a medical student at Trinity College in Dublin, and how he overcame his natural shyness while working behind the bar at Mother Redcap in Camden Town (and acquired a lifelong - scientific - interest in alcohol!), and he pays tribute to mentors in Dublin and London.


    Prof Courtney also reflects on the successes of the Acute Medicine Programme, as well the difficulties facing healthcare in Ireland and the UK, and he describes how remarkably warm relations at St Luke’s Hospital, between hospital doctors, managers and general practitioners, help to ensure political support for developments in facilities and services at the hospital.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    52 mins

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