The Guardian Australia

It’s not Covid that’s broken our health system, it’s years of neglect

- A Victorian doctor

Recently, I was doing night shift in an emergency department and every single patient I treated tested positive for Covid. But that was not the reason they had presented to hospital. It was routine testing that picked up their infection.

This is the reality of working in an Australian emergency department over the last month. This week it has become especially stressful as the volume of Covid-positive presentati­ons has increased – at least two-to-fourfold. The staff on whom it places strain include cleaners, nurses, administra­tion workers and doctors.

Covid-19 has added a new dimension to all emergency department­s in Australia. The advent of the Omicron/ Delta wave of late 2021-22 has put immense strain on these sections of the health workforce due to sheer patient load.

Although inpatient hospitalis­ations and ICU Covid-19 numbers have only begun to rise (these are people with moderate to severe Covid, who mostly require constant oxygen therapy as a minimum), these numbers mask the hundreds of patients presenting to emergency department­s across Australia who are positive on an RAT or a PCR test.

Unfortunat­ely, due to the insane virulence of Covid Omicron, a large proportion of Australian­s is becoming infected very quickly and even though a small proportion of those infected will require hospitalis­ation, that number of patients on top of a consistent 95-99% bed capacity of most health organisati­ons puts the hospital at breaking point.

I have witnessed these added presentati­ons breaking the souls of many healthcare workers who cannot deal with the stress.

The increase in patient loads these health services are experienci­ng has led to patients waiting a long time and health services requesting patients with mild Covid or seeking a Covid RAT or PCR not to attend an ED as they will be turned away. This breaks my heart.

Most will be fine and survive (albeit the clinical studies surroundin­g long Covid do not make for comforting reading) but there are some unlucky few who will deteriorat­e, require ICU care and may die.

We are now two years into the Covid-19 pandemic: from flattening the curve, to lockdowns, to a Covid-free summer, to vaccines plus boosters, to RAT shortages, and finally to living with

Covid. We have all lived through these phases but the reality for the burnedout healthcare worker has not changed.

We are still donning and doffing PPE constantly, we are testing, crying, covering extra shifts, considerin­g quitting, restricted from taking annual leave, stepping outside our comfort zone, breaking bad news, speaking with families by phone rather than face to face, and hoping it all goes away – all the while knowing that Covid is now the new normal.

It’s not just ICU bed numbers that demonstrat­e the extra burden Covid-19 adds to the healthcare system, despite what some politician­s and commentato­rs would like you to believe.

It’s the sheer number of patients with confirmed or suspected Covid at the moment. This gives an additional layer of complexity that must be considered by every health worker on top of often already medically and socially complex patient presentati­ons.

Alongside this, it’s the constant concern by health workers that they will pick up the virus at work and pass it on to their child, elderly parents, pregnant

Our healthcare system is a precious resource. The Covid-19 crisis now puts this system at major risk and along with it the health of all Australian­s

partner, immunocomp­romised friend.

We are now seeing significan­t numbers of colleagues isolating due to being sick and this is all escalating to a point where healthcare workers, particular­ly in Victoria, are exhausted from two years of these worries.

It has become normal to speak to a colleague at work who has made plans to move from emergency department­s to work that allows them to have time away from the constant pressure the health system is under.

It is unfortunat­ely also not uncommon to find distressed colleagues at work.

The most important thing I want to convey is that it’s not Covid that’s broken our health system. It’s decades of a broken health system, run by overworked, exhausted and often underpaid people.

The solution to most of these issues is structural governance reform at both state and federal levels.

Our healthcare system is a precious resource and one of which many who work in it in Australia are proud.

The Covid-19 crisis we are experienci­ng now puts this system at major risk and along with it the health of all Australian­s.

• This piece is written by a doctor working in a hospital in Australia during the Covid-19 pandemic

 ?? Photograph: Carly Earl/The Guardian ?? Two years into the pandemic, the reality for burned-out health workers has not changed
Photograph: Carly Earl/The Guardian Two years into the pandemic, the reality for burned-out health workers has not changed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia