Otago Daily Times

Medical waiting lists remain long in South

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter

SOUTHERN surgical waiting lists seem unlikely to be cleared any time soon, despite the region’s clinicians striving to keep some level of elective surgery going during a difficult winter.

New figures released by the Ministry of Health show that, overall, 27.7% of southern patients wait longer than the recommende­d timeframe of 120 days for a first specialist appointmen­t, and that 52.8% of patients who have been given a commitment to treatment are not treated within the required timeframe of four months.

While neither number is especially good, particular­ly if you are a prospectiv­e patient, each was slightly better than that recorded two months ago.

In May, shortly before it was disestabli­shed as part of the

Government’s health reforms, the Southern District Health Board was told that clearing its backlog of elective surgery could take four to six months and require private sector help.

That was before the onset of winter illness and a second wave of the Omicron variant of Covid19 hit the southern hospital network, creating high rates of staff and patient absence due to illness and forcing some wards to close temporaril­y.

Te Whatu Ora Southern has continued to deliver planned and elective surgery in recent months, although recently it has only achieved about 60% of the usual level of operations.

The latest figures show that some services have been able to maintain or even reduce elective services patient flow indicators (ESPI) breaches in the past two months.

Since April, the southern percentage of ESPI2 (first specialist appointmen­t) breaches have dropped from 31.6% to 27.7%, and ESPI5 (missed deadlines for treatment) breaches were down from 54.8% to 52.8%.

Dental ESPI5 breaches were down by 10.3%, general surgery was down by 4.3%, and ear, nose and throat held steady at 56%; all three were highlighte­d as particular areas of concern by the former board.

The urology and opthalmolo­gy services, each of which have been the subject of highly critical reports by the Health and Disability Commission­er in the past, showed improvemen­t.

Opthalmolo­gy dropped its ESPI5 breach rate by 8.6%, to 40.8%, while urology also reported a small improvemen­t in the same measuremen­t — 27.5% of its patients were in breach, down from 29.4% in April.

However, cardiology has crept back up to the ‘‘red’’ alert level, and 12.5% of patients had exceeded the four months of waiting after being promised treatment.

Cardiothor­acic waits have soared in the past two months: ESPI2 has gone from 0% to 33% in the past month, while ESPI5, which has been steadily climbing for the past six months, has now reached the point where twothirds of patients given a commitment that they will not be treated have not been seen by a surgeon four months later.

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