Middlemore ED a ‘hotspot’
Te Whatu Ora eyes on extra support for emergency departments
Middlemore Hospital has been identified as a ‘‘hotspot’’ needing extra support before the winter flu season.
The emergency department is one of eight places identified by Te Whatu Ora as requiring extra resources.
Plans to divert patients to primary healthcare are also needed – but GPs are concerned they won’t have the capacity to pick up the slack.
Te Whatu Ora – Health New Zealand chairperson Rob Campbell recently said workforce shortages plaguing Middlemore’s ED would not be addressed in time for flu season.
It followed comments from front-line healthcare workers who said the hospital’s ED was haemorrhaging staff and they were concerned about the impact it would have on the department’s ability to function during winter.
But Campbell said it is now working to try and address the problem.
‘‘We may need to redirect staff from other areas so these hotspots, like Middlemore, can be prioritised,’’ Campbell said.
‘‘But it will be different in each area and tailored to their specific needs. Each area will have its own specific plan that will work for that location.’’
When asked if diverting patients from Middlemore Hospital’s ED to primary care providers could be problematic, he said was aware of the ongoing shortage of GPs in Counties Manukau. ‘‘There are some locations around the country where that will work, but we’ve got to find different solutions for each specific area.’’
The other emergency department deemed ‘‘hotspots’’ are Whangārei, Auckland City, Tauranga, Palmerston North, Wellington, Christchurch and Invercargill hospitals.
However, Papakura GP Dr Primla Khar said there are a lot
‘‘We may need to redirect staff from other areas so these hotspots, like Middlemore, can be prioritised . . . But it will be different in each area and tailored to their specific needs. ’’
Rob Campbell,
Te Whatu Ora chairman
of unanswered questions about exactly what Te Whatu Ora plans to do to address the pressure on services expected during the winter flu season.
‘‘Primary health care can’t just be used as a dumping ground for our hospitals,’’ Khar said.
She said GPs have been under a lot of pressure since Covid-19 and staffing shortages remain an ongoing problem in the sector.
Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners president Samantha Murton said adding to the workloads of GPs to reduce the pressure on EDs like Middlemore isn’t a long-term solution.
‘‘There are practices all around the country that have closed their books to new patients and are already under the pump,’’ she said.
However, Murton said GPs could take on more staff during the winter flu season if they had the funding to do so.
‘‘The solution needs to involve all the players and there needs to be some robust discussions about how we can solve this and how we can make it work.’’
In June last year, Counties Manukau Health ran a free GP visits scheme, which was intended to take pressure off
Middlemore Hospital’s emergency department. It announced the scheme just days after a woman died after leaving the ED because of the long wait times.
However, a review of the free GP visits released in September found there was ‘‘limited evidence of any direct benefits’’ from the programme.
The report also said several primary healthcare providers were interested in taking part in the scheme, but were unable to do so because of ‘‘capacity issues’’.
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