Malta Independent

Keeping waiting lists short

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Nearly 8,500 patients are waiting longer than stipulated in the Patient Charter to undergo surgical interventi­ons.

This is not a number. They are 8,454 people who, for different reasons, have not received the medical services that they are entitled to.

Of these, 3,582 were orthopaedi­c cases, 2,949 were general surgical procedures and another 686 were ophthalmic cases. Two cardiothor­acic surgery cases also exceeded the stipulated time, together with 19 dental cases and 30 gynaecolog­ical cases.

The informatio­n was given by Health Minister Chris Fearne last Monday, in reply to a parliament­ary question submitted by Nationalis­t MP Claudette Buttigieg. It refers to the patients who, at the time that the PQ is to be answered, were still on the waiting list.

The Patient Charter lays down that care or interventi­on must be initiated in urgent cases, as within eight weeks from the time that the clinical decision was taken, and within 18 months for a condition that is causing a lesser degree of pain, dysfunctio­n or disability.

There was a time when, with the country having to deal with the Covid-19 pandemic, surgical interventi­ons needed to be delayed. That is understand­able, but we have turned the corner from the pandemic and this can no longer be an excuse.

There were also situations when, due to industrial action having been ordered earlier this year by the Malta Union of Midwives and Nurses, operations were also postponed, with the result that patients with planned procedures were being sent home. The industrial action was suspended in the second week of April, although no agreement has as yet been announced between the government and the MUMN.

The weeks during which the industrial action was taking place must have contribute­d to the backlog in the waiting list for surgical interventi­ons. We are in no way putting the blame on nurses, who have their sacrosanct right to take industrial action. What we are saying is that the two sides should make it a point to resolve the impasse as quickly as they can, and avoid a situation where more patients will have to be placed on the waiting list.

Needless to say, every patient waiting for a surgical interventi­on, whether minor or major, is facing a period of stress and anxiety. If the time between when the decision for an interventi­on is taken and the actual procedure takes place is prolonged unnecessar­ily, this stress and anxiety grows. Added to this, it is also possible that the medical condition of the patient deteriorat­es.

So everything possible should be done by the health authoritie­s to see that these 8,454 patients get the service that they require, without further delay. And everything possible should then be made for the waiting list to be kept short.

Malta has always been proud – under different administra­tions – of the medical services that it offers. Our doctors, nurses and all paramedica­l staff have always gone the extra mile to provide the best possible care to their patients.

We should strive hard to keep up this good name. It is in the country’s best interests that our medical services remain top-notch.

 ?? ?? A man rides his bike on a small road in the outskirts of Frankfurt, Germany, before sunrise on Tuesday, May 30, 2023. Photo : AP/Michael Probst.
A man rides his bike on a small road in the outskirts of Frankfurt, Germany, before sunrise on Tuesday, May 30, 2023. Photo : AP/Michael Probst.

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