Management blamed for Dunedin Hospital patient delays
Poor patient care at Dunedin Hospital is the direct result of management ignoring years of warnings from frustrated specialists, the senior doctors’ union says.
In a letter leaked to RNZ’s Checkpoint yesterday, senior doctors described the crisis as “a slow motion train crash” and “completely predictable”.
They revealed a general surgeon employed full-time had only been operating about twice a month for the last decade because of a lack of theatre access.
Targets for cancer surgery and other elective operations could not be met, while patients with benign conditions, “however disabling”, have little chance of getting an operation.
Association of Salaried Medical Specialists head, Ian Powell, said he was aware of several occasions in which serious concerns over access to operating theatres, the poor standard of facilities, intensive care needs and staff shortages have been “brushed off ” by management. Dunedin Hospital, like all hospitals, was underfunded, he said, but its problems were exacerbated by a “very poor leadership culture” .
“There’s been a failure to invest in the workforce, to invest in the facilities that has probably been a more acute failure than other district health boards that’s actually been embedded for so long.
“But there’s also been a failure of political leadership to actually do something about that.” He said it was actually specialists who called for a review of the department “out of desperation”.