Dr Peter Keenan was Ireland’s first consultant in paediatric emergency medicine. Appointed in 1984,
at Temple Street Children’s Hospital in Dublin, he was immediately thrown in the deep end in an
emergency department that catered for around 50,000 attendances annually.
In this podcast episode, Peter recounts how he set about the management of the huge number of
patients, which he compares to dealing - afresh every day - with ‘a great military retreat’. He talks
about the crucial importance of reducing the number of ‘reflex’ admissions by managing as many
cases within the ED itself as possible. He cites the example of self-limiting febrile seizures, and in
response to the often stated “You can’t be too careful”, he says, “Yes, you can!”, pointing out that
unnecessary admissions to hospital are not only inconvenient, costly and associated with avoidable
and sometimes-distressing tests, but they are also a significant factor in overcrowding within a
paediatric ED. His antidote? ‘Sensible diagnostic thinking’ with this, as with every other presentation.
Beyond bringing some order to a perennially busy inner-city ED, Dr Keenan was also a major mover
in Ireland in the once-marginalised area of child abuse. He recalls here how the understanding and
management of childhood sexual abuse in Dublin was often based on the accounts of women who
attended the Rape Crisis Service at the Rotunda Hospital, just a few hundred metres from Temple
Street, as well as the aftermath of the notorious Cleveland Child Abuse Scandal in the UK, in 1987.
Sadly, Dr Keenan also reflects on the ‘multi-generational’ nature of such abuse, and how much of it is
driven by deprivation and intoxication.
In his own hospital and beyond, Dr Keenan is a much-loved and charismatic paediatrician, famous for
his energy, good humour and pride in his ‘Northside’ pedigree. However, he says he owes a great debt
to many of his colleagues in Temple Street for their willingness to help out, including Professors
Denis Gill, Niall O’Doherty, Niall O’Brien, Michael O’Keeffe and others. And in a particularly
moving reflection, Peter talks of how his ability to cope with a series of personal tragedies, including
the death of his son, Stephen, in a ‘free-diving’ accident in Egypt, was at least partially and
paradoxically eased by the amount of trauma and tragedy he had already faced in his place of work.
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