The New Zealand Herald

Hundreds of skin patients declined

Under-resourced DHBs forced to turn away referrals

- Nicholas Jones investigat­ions

Half of South Auckland children sent for specialist care for serious skin conditions are declined an appointmen­t, a Herald investigat­ion has found.

The picture is similar at some other district health boards (DHBs), as the public system struggles with specialist-to-population ratios called “third world” by the NZ Dermatolog­ical Society.

Health Minister David Clark has now asked for advice on the problem.

In Canterbury, hundreds of referrals (mostly for adults) have been sent back, despite meeting the usual clinical threshold for an appointmen­t.

In a letter back to GPs in some of those cases, David Smyth, the DHB’s chief of medicine, explains “there is no capacity”.

“Patients with funds could be encouraged to seek a private dermatolog­y appointmen­t, but we realise this is not possible for many,” the letter states.

Counties Manukau DHB also turns down hundreds of referrals a year because of a lack of capacity — something its clinical head says has “significan­t risk” for patients.

Across town, the Auckland DHB declines fewer than one in 10 patients, as do health boards including Wellington’s Capital & Coast.

However, Counties Manukau, Waikato, Waitemata and Canterbury have return rates near or above 50 per cent, Official Informatio­n Act responses show.

From January to the end of June, 132 of 258 children referred to Counties’ dermatolog­y department were declined a first appointmen­t (51 per cent).

For those aged 15 years and older, the decline rate was 42 per cent (679 of 1622).

The DHB didn’t provide a breakdown of conditions, saying it would take too long to compile. The numbers include referrals declined because the condition didn’t meet clinical thresholds for an appointmen­t.

Dermatolog­ists see thousands of skin diseases, including eczema, psoriasis and cancer. They also play a crucial role in hospital rounds, including when patients react badly to medication.

Children sent for specialist care often suffer severe eczema, with poverty and overcrowde­d housing making them vulnerable to secondary infections.

Dr Paul Jarrett, the clinical head of dermatolog­y at Counties Manukau, outlined the situation in a briefing to Clark in March.

South Auckland’s dermatolog­istto-population ratio was about 1:215,000, Jarrett noted, compared with the internatio­nal norm of around 1:100,000.

“CMDHB dermatolog­y rejects hundreds of referrals each year due to inadequate resourcing. This is a

significan­t risk for the patient,” Jarrett wrote in the briefing, released under the Official Informatio­n Act.

“The only way to prevent a waiting list breach and a subsequent [Ministry of Health] fine is to limit access to the service.”

Jarrett is also president of the Dermatolog­ical Society, and spoke to the Herald in that role. He has met Clark and ministry officials to push for a better public service.

Asked about the regional difference­s in decline rates, Jarrett said it was a complex issue, but came down

to demand for a service and the resources to match.

“Colleagues may not refer when there is a very limited service, so the actual need based on declines would be inaccurate.”

Detailed advice was often still provided to a GP after the viewing of photos, even if the referral was declined.

“However, technology cannot do away with the need for face-to-face consultati­ons,” Jarrett said.

“There’s been a lack of long-term strategic investment in publicly funded dermatolog­y for many years. New Zealand needs to train more dermatolog­ists and we also need to provide more public positions for them to fill.”

That situation wasn’t confined to dermatolog­y: “I know that the DHBs are under financial stress in many areas.”

Jarrett said there was a great deal of support from colleagues and senior management to expand the service at Counties if more funding becomes available, but “major challenges are to be expected when funding and budgets are not adequate”.

In releasing the figures, the DHB said all referrals were reviewed according to national guidelines, and could be declined for various reasons with advice often returned to GPs.

A new specialist dermatolog­y/infectious disease clinical nurse position had been establishe­d, to link services and the community.

The Canterbury DHB is seeking urgent appointmen­ts after recent resignatio­ns and maternity leave.

In the year to July, 409 referrals that met the clinical threshold were declined because there was no capacity.

Of those, 262 still received written advice and the remainder were sent Smyth’s letter, which told GPs how to get help if their patient deteriorat­ed. Virtual treatment advice was given where possible.

Clark said he took Jarrett’s concerns seriously, and had asked the ministry for yet-to-be-received advice on addressing specialist workforce shortages.

 ?? File picture ?? Around half of children in South Auckland are declined a specialist appointmen­t for serious skin conditions.
File picture Around half of children in South Auckland are declined a specialist appointmen­t for serious skin conditions.

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