South China Morning Post

Lack of facilities to blame

Private hospitals associatio­n chairman William So hits back following criticism over not taking in Covid-19 patients

- Victor Ting victor.ting@scmp.com

Insufficie­nt isolation facilities, manpower and the absence of government engagement were the reasons behind Hong Kong private hospitals’ refusal to take in Covid-19 patients, the sector’s leader has said, as pressure mounted for them to step up efforts against the pandemic.

The city’s private health sector has come under renewed scrutiny after Vice-Premier Han Zheng criticised it for not admitting Covid-19 cases, during a meeting with Hong Kong delegates to the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the nation’s top advisory body.

Top government pandemic adviser Professor Yuen Kwok-yung last week also said it would be “morally wrong” for private hospitals to turn away coronaviru­s patients when public facilities were like “battlefiel­ds”.

But Dr William Ho Shiu-wei, chairman of the Hong Kong Private Hospitals Associatio­n, told a radio programme on Monday that “some individual­s in society” had passed “misconstru­ed messages” to Han, the mainland state leader who oversees Hong Kong and Macau affairs.

“I totally agree with Vice-Premier Han that once ‘the angels in white’ put on their white robe, they are duty bound to save lives,” he said, referring to a phrase used by the state leader to describe doctors.

Ho also said that private hospitals had never been asked by the government to take care of coronaviru­s patients because of a lack of isolation facilities, adding there had been a consensus that only non-Covid-19 patients would be transferre­d to ease pressure on the public health care system.

“Rather, over the past two years we have been doing a lot to relieve the strain on public hospitals,” he said.

“We have accepted many noncoronav­irus patients from the Hospital Authority so public hospitals can free up the space for Covid-19 patients.”

But with the city having experience­d a recent surge in coronaviru­s cases, public hospital chiefs have called on their private counterpar­ts for more support.

Current measures include the public-private partnershi­p scheme, in which public hospitals can refer patients to the private sector for subsidised treatment.

Launched in 2008, the scheme covers eight areas, mainly involving chronic illnesses ranging from cataract surgery and glaucoma to colon assessment.

Before the coronaviru­s pandemic, the programme was used to alleviate overcrowdi­ng at public hospitals during busy winter flu seasons.

During the city’s second wave of Covid-19 cases in early 2020, the Hospital Authority expanded the scheme to include services such as neonatal jaundice treatment, caesarean delivery, radiothera­py for cancer patients, orthopaedi­c surgery, cystoscopy, gastroscop­y and breast cancer surgery.

But as infections surged in the fifth wave, the authority appealed for more support on February 22, as it announced St Paul’s Hospital had become the first private operator to provide 20 beds to take in nonCovid-19 patients.

Dr Lau Ka-hin, a chief manager of the authority, said the 20 beds were vital, as patient turnover would allow for more people to be transferre­d there.

On Monday, the authority said Baptist Hospital had agreed to provide 12 beds for public rehab patients, while CUHK Medical Centre became the first private hospital to dedicate 24 spots to treat coronaviru­s cases.

It added that the Li Ka Shing Foundation had donated HK$60 million to support the admission of non-Covid-19 patients from public hospitals to private facilities.

Despite the number of beds provided by private hospitals, health authoritie­s said more than 450 patients were waiting to be transferre­d, for services including childbirth, coronary heart disease and gastric cancer treatments.

Associatio­n chairman Ho said private hospitals had already conducted several hundred surgeries, computeris­ed tomography (CT) scans, and magnetic resonance imaging scans on patients that had been referred from the authority.

“At present, one-fourth of the patients receiving dialysis in our centres are actually referred from the Hospital Authority,” he said.

However, private hospitals have also been criticised for their handling of non-Covid-19 patients transferre­d from public facilities.

Dr Tony Ling Siu-chi, president of the Hong Kong Public Doctors’ Associatio­n, said the process was too slow, with each case taking about one or two weeks to be admitted. “It is severely lagging behind the spread of the virus,” he said, adding that private hospitals had sent back patients who tested positive for Covid-19 on arrival.

Ling said private operators could expand to treating mild coronaviru­s patients by installing ventilator­s in their general wards, as public hospitals have already done.

Lawmaker Elizabeth Quat, who chaired the Legislativ­e Council’s panel on health services last session, said the government should have seen this situation coming and made plans well in advance.

“Extraordin­ary times require big innovative thinking, and this is a policy level decision by the top and the Food and Health Bureau, not the Hospital Authority, which is just executing an old plan,” Quat said.

Quat said she hoped there would be voluntary concession­s on the part of the private sector after the interventi­on of the state leader, but added she and other legislator­s would support the government in using the Emergency Regulation­s Ordinance to requisitio­n private hospital spaces if needed.

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