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Sheila is off ventilator but has long road to recovery

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By Michelle Crean

After a fierce five-week battle with COVID-19, much loved Killarney woman Sheila Crowley is out of immediate danger and making a slow recovery after being taken off the ventilator last weekend - and is expected to be moved out of the COVID ward within days.

Sheila (60), who lives in Rathmore but is originally from Headford, faces months of recovery after being rushed into ICU at University Hospital Kerry (UHK) critically ill with the deadly virus. Her lungs were "completely full of the virus" according to her family who prayed with at least one hundred others every single day while she fought for her life.

Currently Sheila is on high flow oxygen and only days ago still tested positive for the virus - but is expected to be moved out to a regular ward as soon as she tests negative. However, although in good form, her family says they have no idea how long her recovery will take.

"She is in an isolation room in the COVID ward as she's still testing positive," her niece Ashley Crowley told the Killarney Advertiser yesterday (Thursday). "At least she's out of major danger. We think she'll be moved out to another ward with days once she tests negative but there's a very long road ahead."

In January her family spoke to the Killarney Advertiser to highlight to the public just how dangerous and infectious the virus is - saying they are still "completely baffled" as to how and where she contracted it.

Their prayers for her recovery were answered however, as Sheila was taken off the ventilator last Saturday.

"Her mobility and speech have been affected. We can't speak to her on the mobile but we write letters every day and drop them into her once a week. Sheila is always on our minds. She's smiling all the time and in great form. The main thing is she is doing OK."

Ashley added that they've missed dreadfully her over the five weeks as they usually see her every day.

However, she also added that she's grateful for all the prayers and messages they have received since Sheila became ill.

"We have a 12 hour rosary circle where one hundred people continuously pray. We've been doing that every day. The amount of people praying has been unreal and we just can't thank them enough."

And she added that a huge thank you needs to go to the dedicated staff at UHK.

"They have been fantastic."

 

Bed demand at UHK remains high

Demand for hospital bed capacity including Critical Care at University Hospital Kerry (UHK) remains high.

The necessary arrangements are in place at UHK to upscale Critical Care capacity should that become necessary.
“The hospital remains very busy caring for both COVID and non-COVID patients and the demand for hospital bed capacity including Critical Care is high," the HSE said in a statement this week.

"Critical Care Capacity in the South/South West Hospital Group (S/SWHG) is actively managed as a group resource; thereby ensuring patients always have access to the best possible care setting with inter-hospital transfer as required. Management at University Hospital Kerry is appealing to all members of the public to follow the most recent Government COVID-19 guidelines to help stop the spread.”

 

 

 

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Tributes paid to long-serving Scott’s Hotel manager Dan McCarthy

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Tributes paid to long-serving Scott’s Hotel manager Dan McCarthy


Tributes have been paid this week to Dan McCarthy, the long-standing General Manager of Scotts Hotel, who passed away unexpectedly but peacefully at his home on Sunday, February 22.


A proud Cork native originally from Turners Cross, Dan moved to Killarney over 30 years ago. During three decades at Scotts Hotel, he became a central figure in the local tourism industry and the wider Killarney community.
The O’Donoghue family and the team at Scott’s described him as the “foundation of the hotel,” noting his legendary wit, work ethic, and passion for people.
Dan was laid to rest following a Requiem Mass on Thursday, February 26, at Christ the King Church in Turners Cross, Cork, with burial afterward at St James’ Cemetery, Chetwynd.
His passing has been felt deeply by his colleagues in Killarney, who noted that while he remained a loyal ‘Rebel’, he had truly woven himself into the fabric of the Kingdom.
He is survived by his children, Shane and Grace, his mother Peg, his brothers Ger, Gene, Barry, Dave, and Paul, as well as his extended family, many friends, and longtime colleagues at Scott’s Hotel.

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Arbutus Hotel’s 100th anniversary honoured at IHF Conference

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The centenary of the historic Arbutus Hotel took centre stage this week at the Irish Hotels Federation (IHF) Annual Conference.

Held at the Gleneagle Arena, the gathering of over 300 hoteliers from across the country provided a platform to celebrate the 100-year legacy of the Buckley family and their landmark establishment.


The story of the Arbutus began with Tim Buckley, who spent 14 years in New York working as a night porter and hackney cab driver to save the funds needed to buy the property he had admired as a young man.

After returning from America, Tim and his wife Julia Daly purchased what was then Russell’s Hotel in 1925, officially renaming and launching it as the Arbutus Hotel in 1926.

Julia Daly played a significant role in the hotel’s early success, having attended the Ramsgrange Cookery School in Wexford to ensure the food and hospitality standards were world-class from the outset.


Today, the hotel remains under the care of the Buckley family, with three generations having steered it through a century of Killarney’s tourism history, passing from Tim to his son Pat in the 1960s, and now run by Tim’s grandson, Seán Buckley.


Garrett Power, Chairman of the Kerry IHF, presented a bouquet of flowers to Roisin Buckley, Seán’s daughter and first cousin of international star Jessie Buckley, to mark the occasion. The presentation honoured both the hotel’s centenary and the family’s wider contribution to the town.

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