
34 July-August 2023 July-August 2023 PB
supervised by the nurses. I was calling
ambulances as my brother was screaming, “I am
in pain, I am dying, help me, get me out, I am
doing my penance”. Ambulances were refused.
I say on one particular visit I saw my brother
dragged down a corridor, kicking his legs as he
refused to go for his drugs in front of me.
In an interview in the Daily Mirror in 2005 I was
prominently quoted saying ”help my brother
before he dies”.
In May 2006, Eugene Morgan arranged a
meeting with me at the hospital about my
brother. He was concerned. I got a list of rules. I
had to be careful what food I brought for my
brother as it could interfered with his diet or
medicines, I couldn’t stay so long it interfered
with normal nursing routines, and if I was talking
about Christy’s condition to sta I had to do it
away from him.
Two doctors at Cork University Hospital – Dr
Brian Whelan and Dr Miriam O’Sullivan, a
Registrar, confirmed my brother was suering
with malnutrition.
My brother was being given Gaviscon with
drugs. He was screaming and tearing himself
when he drank it. I asked Dr O’Sullivan to have it
analysed and she immediately had it stopped.
She said she would keep him in Cork University
Hospital. He was placed in an isolated ward as
he was supposed to have TB. The food was left
outside the door and nobody was allowed in. I
brought food into him as I was staying in Cork.
I was still telling them my brother did not want
to stay in St Stephen’s Hospital. Their attitude
was he was very happy and did not want to leave
and yet I was sending her the photos which
identified his weight loss.
My brother was placed in Unit 5 Ward in St
Stephen’s Hospital. This consisted of one
corridor, windows and doors locked. Barbed wire
around the walls. Each time I visited my brother
they took him away. They told me they were
feeding him and when he was returned – he told
me he got the needle and no food and he would
be conked out. He was losing weight very rapidly
and he had an accident that split his head open.
His breathing was so bad, bringing up a lot of
blood. When I asked for an ambulance again to
get him to an emergency ward, it was denied.
They felt they could deal with him in St Stephen’s.
I asked for him to be given a nebuliser. I
requested for him to be hospitalised as I could
see time was running out for my brother. In
January 2007, a psychiatrist at St Stephen’s
Hospital told me my brother was there voluntarily
and he suered with depression. I asked her to
ask him directly whether or not he wanted to stay
there. My brother was so drugged, he could not
respond when I asked him the question. I had to
keep repeating the question, asking Christy,
“Do you want out?”. He said, “I do”. I recorded
this and gave it to the Garda. I then asked the
psychiatrist to get him into a hospital. She said
I could contact her at any time I wished and
walked away.
It seemed to me the mental home had to treat
him as if he had no personality. For me, it was so
personal: I needed to get him treatment, to
escape the limitations of the mental-hospital
regime. But that was not the way psychiatric
medicine worked at the time.
In February 2007 I met Ryan Tubridy from RTÉ
with Paul Russell, his producer, at Heuston
Station. I told him my brother had not long to live
as he was starving to death. Ryan invited me to
contact the station and said he would get him out
of St Stephen’s. My partner said to forget it and
to leave it with someone else. Years earlier in
1990, when I was trying to locate Christy, I had
bumped into Gerry Ryan and explained the story.
In Ireland it’s only a heartbeat from celebrities to
people abused in institutional care.
Later in February 2007, I rang the hospital to
speak to my brother but he was not able to
breathe. I asked for an ambulance to be called
but they said they could not wave a magic wand.
The next day I got a call that my brother was
dead.
I went to the Garda for someone to be
prosecuted but nobody was ever prosecuted.
Sixteen years later, I remain traumatised.
Christy was in care from his earliest childhood
and in a mental home for 40 years. My life, the
life of my mother and the life of Christy, my
brother, were ruined by the Church and State.
Their actions outlive those who did this to us.
Guidlines for Mry Smith when
visiting her brother
HSE clims to be providing
pproprite medicl cre