Mercury (Hobart)

Ambos stressed by work requests

- DAVID KILLICK

AMBULANCE officers are becoming fatigued from a constant barrage of requests to work overtime shifts, one of their managers says.

The service is creating a “Crisis Response Register” to alert staff to shortages after a critical shortage last week forced a patient’s relative to drive an ambulance to hospital while the lone paramedic provided medical treatment.

In an email to staff, the acting manager of Ambulance Tasmania’s southern region Andrew Porter says he acknowledg­ed staff were being deluged with requests to plug gaps.

“I am fully aware that there is a level of fatigue that occurs as a result of continuous text messages advertisin­g overtime for vacant shifts,” he wrote.

He said the service would try to reduce the number of requests.

“I seek to introduce a new mechanism to improve our operationa­l resilience with a purpose of being able to respond rapidly to significan­t surges in demand and thereby avoid compromise in service delivery and support to our team members,” he said.

“This initiative is a direct result of what occurred on the night shift of 27 June, 2019.”

The Mercury understand­s that ambulance staff worked up to 16-hour shifts at the height of last week’s crisis, some working for 10 hours at a stretch without a break.

Mr Porter wrote that ambulance officers would be able to opt out of being asked to work extra shifts. “To facilitate our responses to any future significan­t surge it would be helpful to maintain a register of staff that are willing to be contacted when an emergency/disaster level of escalation occurs.

“In doing this I support staff who do not wish to be contacted because I recognise the range of commitment­s people have.”

Labor health spokeswoma­n Sarah Lovell said the letter demonstrat­ed how stretched the ambulance service was.

“What this shows is just how deep the crisis in the ambulance service is, with staff pushed beyond their limit,” she said. “In writing this letter the service is acknowledg­ing that they are regrettabl­y causing fatigue by having to call in staff so often.

“That’s an admission the service is dangerousl­y understaff­ed because the Hodgman Government has dangerousl­y under-resourced the health system.”

Ambulance Tasmania was given an extra $20 million in the state budget to cope with increasing demand. Ambulance officers responded to more than 80,000 calls — including 50,000 emergency calls — for help last year — up 6.5 per cent on the year prior.

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