The Gold Coast Bulletin

Patient ED wait angers family

- PAUL WESTON paul.weston@news.com.au

A PATIENT remained on a stretcher at the Gold Coast University Hospital for more than four hours as the emergency department confronted record presentati­ons.

The Bulletin has been told the Coast family was shocked as their loved one remained in a room with a waiting paramedic.

Health Minister Cameron Dick has responded by producing figures which show thousands of ED patients could be treated by GPs for sprains, splinters and even sunburn easing the client load.

Opposition health spokesman and Surfers Paradise MP John-Paul Langbroek said he was approached by a family concerned by the extended stay on stretchers at the ED.

“The latest data shows Labor’s ramping failure continues to plague the Gold Coast University Hospital for a record eighth month,” Mr Langbroek told the Bulletin.

Ramping data for June at the University Hospital ED revealed almost a third of all patients were being ramped longer than the designated 30 minutes.

“One Gold Coast local told me a family member had been ramped on an ambulance stretcher for more than four hours recently whilst a paramedic sat with them waiting for ad- mission,” Mr Langbroek said.

The June figures, released last Friday, show a 72 per cent of patients are off stretchers at the Coast University Hospital in 30 minutes, up slightly from 73 per cent in May. The Statewide figure is 90 per cent.

The Opposition contends the Government could not blame the recent bout of flu for the longer waiting times because the data had showed poor response times throughout the year.

Mr Dick described the accusation­s by Mr Langbroek as “both false and offensive” to the hardworkin­g medical staff.

While the number of most urgent cases has jumped nearly 120 per cent between 2013-14 and 2016-17, all Category One patients at the University Hospital’s ED were seen within two minutes.

More than 9500 people presented at Gold Coast Hospitals last year with non-urgent Category Five conditions such as splinters and sprains.

About 85 had coughs, 136 suffered constipati­on and 120 presented with gout.

“Emergency department­s are there for life-threatenin­g emergencie­s, not to help with a stubbed toe or pharmacy scripts,” Mr Dick said.

“When the Newman-Nicholls Government was in power, their solution was to slash 90 nursing jobs at the Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service.”

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