Otago Daily Times

New SDHB strategy for urology waiting list

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health Reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

THE Southern District Health Board has introduced new ‘‘onestop shop’’ urology clinics to attempt to consolidat­e gains made by its ‘‘super clinics’’ held last year.

A review last year found some urology patients had waited up to three years for followup appointmen­ts, cancer patients were kept on hold more than six months for sur gery and surveillan­ce cystoscopy cases were up to a year overdue.

‘‘Superclini­cs’’ were set up late last year, and urologists came south to help ease the patient backlog.

With the new clinics set up and plans to hire more staff in place, SDHB surgical services manager Janine Cochrane is confident the long waiting lists will not be repeated.

‘‘The super clinics were an opportunit­y to introduce a new model of care that streamline­s the outpatient­s’ clinics and reduces the number of outpatient visits needed,’’ she said.

‘‘We have reviewed and are implementi­ng changes to a number of processes, to enable more appointmen­ts and surgeries through better management of staff time and theatre capacity, and better arranging our clinics, so a patient who requires a procedure that can be done in outpatient­s will receive it as part of the appointmen­t, rather than come back on another day.

‘‘We started running these onestop shop outpatient clinics last week.’’

The SDHB has appointed an additional parttime nurse to urology, and is trying to recruit a parttime consultant urologist and a fulltime registrar.

In the meantime, the department is employing locum urologists when needed, and the department’s medical officers are working additional clinic hours.

‘‘While the recruitmen­t process continues our staff are doing a fantastic job and are working very hard to implement the onestop shop outpatient clinics and see as many patients as they can,’’ Dr Cochrane said.

The super clinics allowed 12 urologists — nine of them from elsewhere in New Zealand — to see several hundred patients over two weekends.

The clinics had focused on seeing and treating the backlog of patients referred for a new appointmen­t, or a follow up appointmen­t.

‘‘All patients attending the super clinics who needed treatment received this at the time of appointmen­t, and all those who needed urgent surgery have received it,’’ Dr Cochrane said.

‘‘Patients who required a follow up cystoscopy are on the planned list for procedures as part of followup appointmen­ts.’’

The clinics were not univers ally popular. Dunedin Hospital urologist Kampta Samalia calling them a publicity stunt which would have been unnecessar­y if calls to boost urology services had been heeded earlier.

Dr Cochrane said the Southern DHB was extremely pleased with the impact of the super clinics.

‘‘[We] are confident the process has made a significan­t difference in reposition­ing the service for the future.’’

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