brodiebabe
Registered User
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ClubMan said:Whatever about stuff like socialising money, hairdressing vouchers, cars etc. for asylum seekers I thought that the health boards (?) could issue grants to people for stuff like baby's buggies and other baby paraphenalia if they were judged to be in need of such things?
ClubMan said:My mother in law insists that she saw this happening. I'm skeptical.
Presumably the taxi was a cheaper option than using an ambulance for this purpose?CMCR said:About 15 or so years ago, a family member of mine was obliged to travel daily to Dublin for medical treatment. These 5+ hour round-trips were provided by taxi and funded by the HSE as there were no dialysis services in his region. The taxi vouchers he received had nothing to do with his status. They were provided by the HSE because he was availing of a service he was entitled to (and at that stage anyway he was too unwell to drive himself to access those services).
CMCR said:A taxi driving friend recently told me about collecting a 19 year old heroin addict and driving her to the dentist. She was having 7 permanent teeth removed. The cost of the taxi was covered by the HSE.
ubiquitous said:Presumably the taxi was a cheaper option than using an ambulance for this purpose?
ubiquitous said:Did she REALLY tell the taxi driver her age? Or how many teeth she was going to have removed?
?
ClubMan said:My mother in law insists that she saw this happening. I'm skeptical.
Both.stuart said:Skeptical?
In general or on this point?
or both?
Both but in particular my MIL's claim to have witnessed a buggy abandonment herself.CMCR said:I'm unclear on what Clubman means too - do you mean you are skeptical about the comment concerning asylum seekers leaving a buggy at a bus-stop or skeptical about the lone parents receiving taxi vouchers?
Whatever about admitting to getting 7 teeth out I can't imagine even a junkie admitting to a stranger to being addicted to smack.Yes. Came up as part of the conversation on the way over to dentist. He said she was in a very bad way - looked dreadful, etc. HSE probably have to arrange taxi services for those clients as otherwise they would probably not avail of treatment.
Yeah, I met a taxi driver in Ballina who was ferrying 2 ladies up to Dublin on a weekly basis for cancer treatment - this is probably the least the health service can do given that they obviously don't have the appropriate treatment facilities anywhere closer for the ladies.Taxis are used nowadays to get elderly people over to the day hospitals and such like. It definitely seems to make more sense than using an ambulance or having a full time fleet of drivers on hand.
cuchulainn said:Friend of mine was travelling to Dublin recently for football match. met up with a friend of his who has free travel and is entitled to take a 'carer' with him on the train. my friend duly turned up at Clarke station (1916 and all that) with this other person and all the irish rail official did was take the other persons details and he got free travel that day. my friend couldnt believe it. this is no urban legend, whatever about the free taxis. ps the 'incapicated' person left him in Dublin and went on about his business. they arranaged to meet back at Connolly ( 1916 again).
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