Otago Daily Times

Additional ED resourcing confirmed

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

HELP is on the way for Dunedin Hospital’s embattled emergency department.

High patient numbers and low staff numbers resulted in the department’s health and safety representa­tive lodging a provisiona­l improvemen­t notice, which requires the Southern District Health Board to take action to fix the issues identified.

The deadline to identify those actions has now passed and WorkSafe New Zealand is considerin­g the SDHB’s response.

At a board hospital advisory committee meeting yesterday, board member Dr John Chambers, an emergency department clinician at Dunedin Hospital, asked what improvemen­ts had been made.

The ward had been under tremendous pressure in July, he said.

‘‘Many of these were very sick patients who required admission to hospital, and [for] the nurses who put the provisiona­l improvemen­t notice it was a cry for help and seeking for an avenue to get change.

‘‘It is mainly nursingled, it is not yet resolved, and I know one of our junior doctors has been also been brave enough to raise concerns about the staffing situation on night shift.’’

Specialist services executive director Patrick Ng said the board had confirmed additional resourcing for triage and was recruiting.

It was also seeking additional healthcare assistants for night shifts, and confirmed more overnight charge nursing cover.

‘‘Those are additional, unbudgeted, unplannedf­or roles which have been agreed to because of the provisiona­l improvemen­t notice.’’

The SDHB had also agreed to a benchmarki­ng exercise to compare staffing levels at both Dunedin and Southland Hospital emergency department­s with those at other DHBs.

Figures presented to the committee yesterday showed high demand at both department­s in July, usually a busy time due to winter ailments.

Average daily presentati­ons in Dunedin were 132, compared to a yeartodate average of 126, and at Southland it was 110, just up from the average of 108.

‘‘A number of days of extreme pressure have been reported and we have seen these translate into access pressure for inpatient beds, and the hospitals changing status from green to yellow to orange (with a couple of brief periods of red),’’ Mr Ng said.

‘‘The resulting pressure has been particular­ly felt by the operations team who have then instituted actions to increase dischargin­g and enable the flow into inpatient beds to resume.’’

The colourcode­d alert system was introduced to identify when the emergency department was close to being overwhelme­d: red is the secondhigh­est alert level, followed by black.

‘‘In Dunedin, as well as the high volumes we have also had reports of roster gaps which have been unable to be filled either due to increased rates of illness or vacancies,’’ Mr Ng said.

Southland Hospital had had its own unique challenge, having to deal with the brief admission of Covid19 positive crew members from the container ship Mattina, which Mr Ng said had caused significan­t disruption for the hospital.

Dr Chambers said the Alert Level 4 lockdown had offered some respite for the department, but it had to be expected volumes would rise again.

He was concerned that the longerterm measures the board had approved to address the issues were not due to begin until October 2022.

‘‘It is quite a long time before there is any significan­t respite in sight there.’’

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