Otago Daily Times

'How many people have to die...'

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

SOUTHERN cancer patients are dying and Health Minister Andrew Little needs to step in and save them, patient advocate Melissa Vining says.

‘‘How many people have to die before anyone takes action?’’ she asked yesterday.

‘‘I just cannot understand how the SDHB is imploding and noone is taking immediate action; the response we saw to Covid is what we need right now to treat cancer in the southern region.’’

Southern District Health Board waiting lists for cancer detection and treatment are at record levels, and 157 people are now waiting for radiation oncology treatment.

The Otago Daily Times understand­s at least one complaint about harm being caused to a patient due to delays in getting a scan has been lodged in recent days, as well as complaints about delays in receiving first specialist appointmen­ts for cancer treatment.

In July last year Ms Vining — the widow of Winton farmer Blair Vining, whose petition for better cancer care sparked the Government to set up Te Aho o Te Kahu, the Cancer Control Agency — made a presentati­on on cancer treatment to the SDHB.

At the time she said long waits for treatment were cruel, inhumane and killed people, and yesterday she told the Otago Daily Times that it seemed like nothing had changed.

‘‘It is very sad. Every day I am being contacted by patients and their families and it is the exact same issues I talked about: they are not only dealing with a cancer diagnosis but with these long waits which are causing huge trauma.

‘‘People are actually dying and noone is doing anything about it. There is a lot of acknowledg­ing, but I just can’t understand why the Government and Minister of Health are standing by and noone is taking action to resolve it.’’

Health Minister Andrew Little needed to step up and take immediate action as lives were at stake, Ms Vining said,

‘‘The situation here is outrageous.

‘‘The comments earlier that this is criminal are not an exaggerati­on, because people quite simply are dying because of this.’’

Mr Little, who had to fly to Whangarei as soon as Parliament adjourned yesterday, was unable to respond by deadline.

Meanwhile, WellSouth acting medical director Stephen Graham said Otago and Southland GPs were unable to refer directly for most diagnostic scans, so they and their patients with suspected cancers relied on waiting lists not backing up.

‘‘It is painful for everybody involved: the patient, the GP, and I’m sure for the people in the hospital, who are doing their best but are having to deal with resourcing problems.’’

GPs were often the first people to detect a possible cancer and were frustrated if a potentiall­y treatable problem was not tackled swiftly, Dr Graham said.

‘‘We work in an environmen­t in Southern, and New Zealand to a lesser degree, where access for general practice to scanning is severely limited, to the point where it is almost nonexisten­t.’’

❛ How many people have to die before anyone takes action?

Melissa Vining

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