Showing posts with label Dr Hubert Minnis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr Hubert Minnis. Show all posts

Friday, October 22, 2021

Hubert Minnis jumps again - before he was pushed!

Statement by the Leader of the Free National Movement (FNM) Party - The Hon. Dr. Hubert Minnis


Minnis has declared he will not run for the FNM leadership, nor will he allow his name to be placed in nomination!



Hubert Minnis
At the end of November, the Free National Movement will hold a one-day convention to elect the Leader of the Party.  I will not nominate for the leadership nor will I allow my name to be placed in nomination.  I wish those who will contest for the leadership the very best.  

I will continue to serve in the House of Assembly as the Member of Parliament for Killarney.  I again thank the constituents of Killarney for their support since 2007 and during the recent general election.

As a former prime minister and in whatever role is assigned to me, I will support the work of the Official Opposition to advocate on behalf of the Bahamian people and to hold the Government accountable.

We remain in a deadly global pandemic.  I will continue to promote measures to save and to protect the lives and livelihoods of Bahamians, utilizing my experience in office and as a medical doctor.  I will never tire in advocating for the needs of the poor, the disadvantaged and the more vulnerable in our society.

It has been an extraordinary privilege to serve our country as prime minister and as a member of parliament.  I thank the Bahamian people and the members of the FNM for their support and encouragement.  I also thank the many well-wishers for their advice, prayers and assistance.

The Free National Movement has an extraordinary legacy, guided by the values of freedom, equality and opportunity for all.  At our 50th anniversary, there is much to celebrate as we renew our mission and embrace the future.

I have often spoken of the God of New Beginnings.  May God bless the FNM with wisdom, discernment and fortitude.  

And may God bless our Bahamas.

Friday, October 8, 2021

An Open Letter to Dr. Hubert Alexander Minnis, Leader of the Official Opposition - FNM party

Dear Dr Minnis:


Hubert Minnis

You have had your opportunity to lead The Bahamas and make an historic difference, but you have squandered it from day one.  It all started with your demagogic position on VAT – leading up to the 2017 general election.

Although you were right at the table in the last Hubert Ingraham FNM Administration – between 2007 and 2012 - where the implementation of VAT in The Bahamas was set in motion, and subsequently implemented by the Perry Christie PLP Regime of 2012-2017 at 7.5%, you played brand new and publicly opposed it.

Then after the FNM won the 2017 election, you became the Prime Minister and increased the VAT rate to where it is today – at 12%!  So, you unwittingly provided all the nails for your political coffin.

It was a hugely unforgiving political move, as the Bahamian electorate would let you know in overwhelming fashion in the 2021 election.  You did it to your own lying self Dr, and you will always be remembered publicly for it.

On top of your unbearable VAT increase, came Hurricane Dorian and the Corona.  All hell break loose after that.  

And we, the poor people especially – were waiting patiently on your lying ass. You could of felt it - no doubt, so you knew what was coming down the pipe.  

That’s why you jumped before you were pushed, and called an early election.  Good move bro.  You are now officially done!


Regards,

Dennis Dames

Monday, December 13, 2010

Voices Killarney poll shows that many support the proposed BTC sale

Constituency poll shows many support proposed BTC sale
tribune242



A recent poll taken in the Killarney constituency shows that there are many Bahamians who support the government’s intention to sell a 51 per cent stake in The Bahamas Telecommunications Company to the British telecommunication company Cable and Wireless Communications (C&WC).

A recent poll conducted on “Voices Killarney,” an online news letter from the constituency office of Dr Hubert Minnis revealed that 67 people who participated in the poll supported the BTC deal while 50 persons opposed the deal. The poll, which was conducted on December 10 and 11, also revealed that six persons who participated in the poll were undecided.

Among those who supported the sale one person commented, “I think the sale is an excellent idea. C&W are in the Caribbean Islands. Although we are considered ahead of them economically their telephone technology is far ahead of us.” Another posted, “The union just needs to get over it. It is ludicrous that a union dictates who the government sells any corporation to. The government is elected by the people to conduct work on behalf of the people so I believe that every government would make decisions that are in the best interest of the country. Those people at Batelco are lazy and are afraid of privatization.”

Another person in support of the sale commented, “The sale of Batelco is long overdue. We are paying far too much for out dated systems and service that is not customer-oriented. I have been trying to find out for over one year how my land line was turned over in the name of my tenant and they were allowed to transfer my phone line when they gave up the lease on my property. They have also not been able to satisfy me with what has happened to my security deposit. The prices are too high, the service is poor and I think we need to up grade.”

Among those who opposed the decision one person commented, “I agree that staff numbers need to be reduced and employees simply more efficient to cut operation costs. However, if it must be sold, it should be sold to Bahamians with the capital and vision to further advance the company with the latest technologies available in phone and Internet services.”

Another stated, “Batelco belongs to the people of the Bahamas and should not be sold. Bahamians should own and run Batelco.” “I feel that it was a very bad decision because they sold such a great portion of the company for such little money. BTC makes a lot of money just in one year. In two years time BTC would have already made over that amount, so it really made no sense selling for so little,” another person commented.

Among those who were undecided, one stated, “Notwithstanding that the sale is inevitable and probably necessary. I'm curious to know what criteria was laid out to qualify as a purchaser. Does C&W meet the criteria, if they do and other companies also did, what were the track records of the other companies when compared to C&W? Why must we sell 51 per cent as opposed to 49 per cent. Why not consider a group of Bahamians as opposed to foreigners?”

December 13, 2010

tribune242

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

...half of all deaths in The Bahamas are attributed to diseases that are caused by poor lifestyle choices

Historical Perspective on Bahamian Healthcare
by Larry Smith
bahamapundit


Experts say that to address the skyrocketing costs of modern medicine, we have to rely more on preventive and primary care rather than costly hospital treatment.

According to Health Minister Dr Hubert Minnis, about two thirds of public spending on healthcare goes to treat diseases that are caused by poor lifestyle choices. And half of all deaths in the Bahamas are attributed to these same illnesses.

For example, there are tens of thousands of diabetics in the Bahamas, and complications from the disease include kidney failure, heart disease and blindness. It costs taxpayers $60,000 a year to treat each of the more than 200 people with kidney failure who are currently undergoing dialysis at the Princess Margaret Hospital.

Bahamians spend about half a billion dollars on public and private healthcare today (some 7 per cent of GDP). This represents an incredible transformation from the early years of the 20th century, and it is interesting to take a historical view of this subject.

Back then, there were only three doctors outside of Nassau - at Inagua, Harbour Island and Green Turtle Cay - to serve 42,000 people living in the widely scattered out islands. According to Dr Harold Munnings in his 2005 history of the Princess Margaret Hospital, out islanders "obtained what care they could from untrained midwives, clergymen and herbalists".

The PMH began life as a poorhouse in 1809 and entered the 20th century as a place of last resort for those in need of medical care. According to a 1905 account It had four sections - for the sick, indigent, lepers and insane. Treatment was free, but patients were referred to as "inmates", and those who could afford it arranged for medical care at home - quite the opposite to current practice.

In 1925 several American visitors contracted typhoid fever in Nassau - a killer disease transmitted by dirty food and water, so the British authorities dispatched a senior public health expert to investigate.

He deplored the filth of heavily populated communities not included in the city's new water-works and sewerage system, then under construction. He also noted the prevalence of tuberculosis, venereal disease, gastroenteritis and tetanus, and strongly criticised public indifference to Nassau's dreadful sanitary and housing conditions.

Unfortunately, these conditions did not begin to change until the middle of the century, when a British official was still able to write that "Behind Nassau's picturesque old-world streets and the princely mansions along the East and West shores are slums as bad as any West Indian Colony, and far worse than anything Bermuda can show."

In 1953, two thirds of the homes on New Providence still had no running water. And preventable diseases were due mostly to overcrowding, ignorance, poor nutrition, and lack of public hygiene.

An unpublished medical memoir written by Dr Malcolm Hale about a year before his death in 2003 at the age of 77 offers a useful perspective on this period of modern history. Hale arrived in Nassau in 1954 on a three-year contract as a medical officer for the new Bahamas General Hospital (which was renamed after a visit by Princess Margaret in 1955), and stayed on in private practice.

"I arrived by boat from England on December 16," he recalled. "We anchored outside the bar and a tender came out to carry us in. On it was a reporter from the Guardian to interview the new doctor, and a photographer to take his picture...the effort hinted at the state of medical needs of the community."

He identified the new Emerald Beach Hotel on Cable Beach, the redeveloped Bahamas General Hospital and the first City Market food store as emblems of changing times for Bahamians. They represented a dramatic break with the economy of the past, he said, and were a sign that prosperity was beginning to trickle into the general population.

Shortly after his arrival Dr Hale was put in charge of the TB and geriatric wards at the Prospect Hospital, as well as the Lazaretto off Carmichael Road, which was no more than a narrow dirt track. This was in addition to his out-patient and casualty duties, as well as occasional out island clinics.

Prospect Hospital was a collection of wooden buildings on Prospect Ridge built for the American and British air forces who trained in the Bahamas during the Second World War. Like Windsor airfield it was handed over to the Bahamian government in 1945.

"The general health of the population was poor," Dr Hale recalled. "Tuberculosis was rife; new cases were discovered almost daily, many from out island settlements, some of which like Rolleville (Exuma) and Moores Island (Abaco), were heavily infected. Fortunately, my entry to the medical profession coincided with the discovery and availability of a whole range of effective medications...Now patients came to be cured, not to die."

He described the geriatric wards as pathological museums. "Especially impressive were cases of elephantiasis and the whole spectrum of tertiary syphilis. The leprosarium was a collection of small wooden cottages (with) about 20 patients when I took over, most in advanced stages of disfigurement, especially of hands and face.

"The few new cases I admitted were diagnosed in the early stages and so far as I know all were cured and returned undisfigured to society. The old cases stayed at the Lazaretto and died off over a period of several years. Most of the cases were white."

In the out-patient clinics, Dr Hale treated many malnourished children with intestines bloated with Ascaris worms. Vermicide was probably the most heavily prescribed drug at the time, and he credited it with making the greatest single contribution (except for penicillin) to the health of the community.

Dysentery was also common, as were sexually transmitted diseases like gonorrhea and syphilis. But the popular remedy for VD at the time, Dr Hale noted, was to have sex with female infants. "It took a major educational effort by the profession to disabuse the population of this idea, and I wonder today if we fully succeeded."

Although HIV-AIDS was unknown at the time, Hale suspected that "the occasional cases of multipathology which responded to no treatment, and which were unsolved diagnostic puzzles, and invariably fatal, may have been AIDS. Interestingly, as AIDS increased, the other STD’s declined and have become rare."

Epidemics of whooping cough were devastating, Hale said. "I remember Kenneth Eardley, an older private physician, telling me he had signed two or three hundred death certificates due to this illness in one outbreak just a few years previously. And how many times have I heard older women say 'I born 13 but I bring up three'?"

In the 1950s there was relatively little obesity and much less diabetes than now, Dr Hale reported. But one serious health condition has remained constant. High blood pressure was, and is, a common problem amongst Bahamians of all ages, together with its deadly complications of stroke and heart disease.

in fact, while he was a resident at the PMH, Dr Hale and others contributed data to a US hypertension study. In their 1958 report, the American researchers noted that:

"Almost everyone on the Islands has a relative that has 'the high blood,' died of hypertension, or has had a stroke...An analysis of the water supply in Nassau and several of the outer island groups revealed that the well water was significantly high in sodium content."

The study reported salt levels of less than a milligram per millilitre in the drinking water of major US cities, whereas drinking water at the PMH contained 129 milligrams and on Eleuthera 210 milligrams. This meant that Bahamians were ingesting up to 10 grams of salt per day from water alone. And that was in addition to the sodium found naturally in foods, or added in cooking. Nor did it account for the fact that salt pork was a common ingredient in most dishes at the time.

Currently, the American Heart Association recommends an intake of less than 2.5 grams of salt per day for the general population - that's about a teaspoon - and even less for high-risk individuals. I can testify from personal experience that this guideline is as difficult to achieve in today's fast food-dominated diet as it was back in the 1950s when we all drank salt water.

Hale was one of a growing band of doctors who participated in the vast expansion of medical skills and services in the Bahamas over the past half century. His assessment of how things had changed over that time?

"Today the general health of the population is excellent," he wrote in 2002. "except for self-inflicted conditions, principally obesity (and its complications), HIV-AIDS, and gunshot wounds."

In fact, the current level of violent crime is straining our healthcare system. There were 51 cases of knife and gun attacks treated by the PMH in October alone, and ER doctors treated more than 160 other assault cases, as well as 94 traffic accident victims last month.

Apart from these walking wounded, most of the patients who crowd the PMH emergency room don't need to be there - they just don't know any better. Preventive medicine and affordable drugs are important, but public education to improve compliance or avoid problems in the first place is just as critical.

There is a growing awareness in government that we will never have enough money to solve our healthcare challenges using costly tertiary care approaches. Cancer, AIDS, diabetes, hypertension and stroke, heart attack and kidney failure top the list of modern medical problems in the Bahama - and they all are preventable with education, diet and drugs.

For the time being plans have been shelved for a new $600 million public hospital, which surveyors were staking out only months ago on acres of prime forested land at Prospect Ridge. The enormous investment that would be required to build a new hospital has led successive governments to content themselves with redeveloping the PMH at its present site.

"I would love to work in a new, state-of-the-art hospital," Dr Munnings told me recently, "but a properly funded programme to prevent chronic disease has to be the priority."

November 17, 2010

bahamapundit

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Jerome Gomez and Dr Daniel Johnson confirmed as Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) candidates for the next general election

PLP confirm Killarney, Carmichael candidates
tribune242


THE PLP has confirmed that the party will run financial services consultant Jerome Gomez in Killarney and Dr Daniel Johnson in Carmichael in the next general election.

According to a PLP release, Mr Gomez, a financial services consultant and former member of several Government boards, was ratified by the PLP's National General Council on Thursday evening as the Killarney candidate.

Meanwhile, Dr Daniel Johnson, a podiatrist, son-in-law of the late Sir Lynden Pindling and son of former MP for Cat Island Oscar Johnson, will run under the party's banner in Carmichael.

Presently, the Killarney seat is held by Dr Hubert Minnis, also Minister of Health, and Carmichael is represented by Desmond Bannister, Minister of Education.

Mr Gomez, 46, is the principal of the chartered accounting firm Baker Tilly Gomez and has previously worked at Shell Bahamas Limited and Barclays Bank in various positions.

He is the managing director of Gomez Corporate Management Ltd., a licensed financial and corporate service provider, and Gestfinanz (Bahamas Ltd.), a Bahamian licensed securities investment advisor.

As a Fund Administrator for the Bahamas Entrepreneurial Venture Fund, the government sponsored venture capital fund, the party noted that Mr Gomez has "had the privilege of providing hundreds of entrepreneurs with business consulting services."

Mr Gomez served for a period as chairman of the Hospitals and Health Care Facilities Licensing Board, deputy chairman of the Town Planning Committee and a member of the Real Estate Disciplinary Committee.

He is a graduate of St. Augustine's College and holds a Bachelor of Science in Economics and Finance from Barry University, Miami, Florida. He is married to Jean Gomez (nee Shannon) and is the father of five children.

The party did not release any further information about Dr Johnson.

August 23, 2010

tribune242

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Dr Hubert Minnis - Killarney MP was on the verge of resigning his cabinet post after a contentious exchange with Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham

Cabinet Minister 'was on verge of quitting'
tribune242:


AFTER a particularly contentious exchange in Cabinet last week between Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham and his MP for Killarney, it is reported that Dr Hubert Minnis was on the verge of resigning his cabinet post, but changed his mind.

According to well-placed sources within the party, it is claimed that Mr Ingraham "belittled" his Minister of Health to the point that the minister felt he had no other option but to tender his resignation.

However, since this exchange it is said that Dr Minnis has been "talked out" of his previous position.

Sources claim the incident occurred during a special cabinet meeting in front of some 25 persons last week.

Having always been perceived as a "close friend" and ally of the Prime Minister, other sources within the FNM said that even if the Killarney MP was so personally offended, he would not have resigned from his cabinet appointment as the MP has always held future leadership aspirations.

However, a well-placed source within the government claimed that Dr Minnis and the Prime Minister's relationship has been strained for over a year.

"It would be political suicide for him to leave. In my opinion Minnis is too Machiavellian for that. So even if he was offended to that degree I don't see him leaving.

"Once they had an exchange in the Smokers Room at the House (of Assembly) and someone asked, 'Hey, isn't that your friend?' And the response I recall was that 'there isn't any friends in here'."

With one of his Members of Parliament, Branville McCartney having already resigned from the Cabinet earlier this year, Mr Ingraham noted at the time that it is always regrettable for a Prime Minister to lose a Minister or Minister of State.

As for Dr Minnis, it is unknown what sparked the disagreement or how the incident will play itself out as cabinet is expected to meet today and the Budget debate opens in Parliament on Wednesday.

Repeated attempts to reach the MP for Killarney were unsuccessful up to press time last night.

June 01, 2010

tribune242

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Current rate of urbanisation could bring 'unprecedented challenges'

By NOELLE NICOLLS
Tribune Staff Reporter
nnicolls@tribunemedia.net:


THE current rate of urbanisation in the Bahamas, as well as globally, could present "unprecedented social, health and environmental challenges" if not addressed, according to health experts.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) and its regional arm, the Pan-American Health Organisation (PAHO), are calling for action to address the needs of the changing population landscape.

The theme "Urbanisation and Health" governed the celebration of World Health Day 2010 yesterday.

Speaking at a press conference yesterday morning Minister of Health Dr Hubert Minnis said:

"Cities are the centre of commercial, political and cultural life, attracting people who are looking for greater wealth and a more prosperous life.

"People who live in urban settings are exposed to a wide range of environmental factors. While a move to city life brings about improvement in economic status, it also leads to public health challenges."

Over half of the world's 6.3 billion inhabitants reside in cities. According to the United Nation Population Division, in 20 years, six out of every 10 people are projected to be city dwellers.

Almost 85 per cent of the Bahamas' population lives in urban areas, which is well above the Caribbean's 67 per cent average. By the year 2050, the urban population in the Bahamas is expected to comprise 91 per cent.

Dr Minnis declared that the Bahamas is on board with the global World Health Day celebrations.

The aim of the ministry is to integrate the activities associated with World Health Day into a "sustained strategy to combat the effects of urban living and reverse trends".

On Saturday, the Ministry of Health will host a Farmers' Market at the Fox Hill Parade to showcase the produce of local farmers, backyard gardeners and producers of native products.

The market is aimed at highlighting some of the steps people can take towards improving their health, particularly by eating healthier.

Several other health challenges to be examined, are pollution, water, sanitation, waste, increased exposure to communicable diseases and violence, smoking and second-hand smoke, drug use, and an increase in chronic non-communicable diseases.

"Regular activities at the street, neighbourhood, and local levels, in addition to those occurring at the national and regional level can have a profound impact on the health of the population. Urbanisation also creates stress on the environment," said Dr Minnis.

"We can combat population and environmental stress by encouraging neighbourhoods to participate in clean-up campaigns and walking groups to promote healthier environments. Communities can come together to promote safety and decrease violence. Taken together, these activities can contribute to a healthier population and safer environment for all," he said.

The Bahamas recently moved on one area of recommended policy actions to improve urban living conditions.

To improve conditions, communities are encouraged to adopt "progressive land use policies" that regulate commercial and non-commercial areas, as well as protected lands for recreation and the preservation of natural resources.

The Revised Planning and Subdivision legislation, recently passed in the House of Assembly, seeks to address these issues, among others.

It is expected to be implemented by July 1.

April 08, 2010

tribune242