‘Extreme urgency’ as government ‘inundated’ by Mater Dei requests for beds for the elderly

€10.5 million spent this month alone on direct orders for private home beds for the elderly, on top of €13 million in the first six months of the year.

 

The Active Ageing and Community Care Ministry is facing “extreme urgency” as it is being “inundated” with requests from Mater Dei Hospital for beds for the elderly, according to a raft of direct orders worth €10.5 million that have been awarded in August alone.

The government has spent €10.5 million this month, so far, in direct orders for beds in private care homes for the elderly as it grapples with waiting lists of over 1,000 people. In the meantime, private and state homes alike are understood to be full or very nearly full to the brim.

The €10.5 million in direct orders for beds comes on top of the €13 million that has already been spent on such services over the first six months of this year.

According to notices of direct orders published, the awards of contracts without calls for competition result from “extreme urgency brought about by events unforeseeable for the contracting authority [the Active Ageing and Community Care Ministry]” to “address waiting list pressure”.

The situation, according to the wording in the contract notice, is becoming increasingly dire.

“AACC is being inundated with requests from Mater Dei Hospital (MDH) to admit patients in our residential care homes due to the large influx of patients being admitted at MDH and in view of the always long waiting list of elderly people waiting to reside in a care home.”

The other primary reason for the purchasing of still more bed space, according to the official contract award notices, was that the “Cospicua Home for Older Persons has been closed to be refurbished and residents are being allocated at other Care Homes. These are the main reasons for buying these additional beds.”

The Imperial Residence Home in Sliema won the lion’s share, bagging a contract for the provision of long-term care beds worth €8,269,440.

Casa Pinto in Qormi received a direct order of €782,943, CareMalta was awarded a €363 893 contract, while St Elizabeth Residential Home in Rabat was awarded two contracts, respectively worth €650,436 and €395 321.

It is understood that the direct orders are a matter of management by crisis and that, following contractual issues at the Cospicua home for the elderly, a new breed of competitive tenders are to be published in the coming months in the upcoming tenders for the Cospicua and Msida homes.

This month’s expenditure comes on top of the €13 million in direct orders over the first six months of this year to buy more beds for the elderly from the private sector.

The Imperial Residential Home won an order of over €5 million, for an additional 40 beds over the next three and a half years.

49 additional beds were leased from Dar l-Annunzjata in Tarxien for €3.5 million until February 2026 while the Archbishop’s Curia was awarded €1.5 million in direct orders to provide beds at Dar Saura and Casa Leone.

Another 34 beds were leased from Casa Pinto in Qormi for almost €800,000 for 18 months while CareMalta was awarded a new contract worth almost €400,000 for an additional 10 beds across various homes.

Although the ministry explains away the latest raft of direct orders as having been necessitated by ‘extreme urgency’, the practice has been the order of the day for years with no rules in place and everything depending on government officials who negotiate piecemeal contracts worth millions of euros with the homes’ operators.

                           

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Winston Psaila
Winston Psaila
1 year ago

And where is all this money coming from, when it is understood that not even gold reserves can cope any longer.

Doreen Depasquale
Doreen Depasquale
1 year ago
Reply to  Winston Psaila

Do the gold reserves still exist?

makjavel
makjavel
1 year ago

As usual an incompetent government who have no idea of looking at the age distribution shift . Those that were born before 1958 are all retired. Add 10 years 1948 ( 75 years old) would probably need home help and some to be in home care, 75 to 85 to be in a home. Today people live longer. What did the Government do to contain this problem? NOTHING: Gave away €400 million to crooks to share the spoils with. I guess getting rid of the old by lack of attention is an option for the government to save on pensions and Care costs? One thing is certainly happening which is terrifying , Suicides among the young.

12X
12X
1 year ago
Reply to  makjavel

Yet when Alfred Sant suggested prior to the move to Mater Dei that St Lukes should be refurbished into an elderly home, everybody ridiculed him.

Judy
Judy
1 year ago
Reply to  12X

It would have been the right thing to do, but this Gov did nothing about it and left it in the worst state possible/

Carmel Carmel Callus
Carmel Carmel Callus
1 year ago
Reply to  12X

What did he do? Nothing.

Joseph Tabone Adami
Joseph Tabone Adami
1 year ago
Reply to  makjavel

In other words: lack of foresight, lack of planning, complete lack of competent governance.

What now will remain in the near future is: lack of enough funds – for health and related services, I mean, not for filling the throughs to overflowing!

Francis Said
Francis Said
1 year ago

It all boils down to Steward. They did not deliver what was promised and this is the result.
Unfortunately long term planning is non existent in this government’s mentality.

Judy
Judy
1 year ago
Reply to  Francis Said

And the Gov “s fault as the Maltese people were the best to manage the hospitals and not these . But then the Maltese would not pay any commissions to those concerned , Right?

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