Otago Daily Times

Waiting for waiting list slashing

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IT is not surprising there is already scepticism about the recently announced taskforce’s ability to slash burgeoning public hospital waiting lists.

While limits to elective treatments during the Covid19 pandemic response saw the number of people waiting for first specialist appointmen­ts and surgery blow out, concern about people languishin­g on waiting lists is an issue which has been around for decades.

There has been controvers­y over the lack of uniformity in the allocation of points to qualify for various procedures, district health board (DHB) targets for elective surgery which affected funding and prompted accusation­s of game playing, efficiency projects supposed to cut waste and speed things up, and upsets over patients still in agony directed back to their general practition­er because they were not deemed to meet the threshold for treatment.

Concerns about short staffing, both in terms of nursing and senior doctors, never seem to have been far away, and some hospital facilities are below par, including those in Dunedin.

Demand always exceeds supply, and that is before any considerat­ion is given to the poorly measured unmet need where prospectiv­e patients never get within cooee of a waiting list.

It is a big call now for the taskforce, led by Auckland colorectal surgeon Andrew Connolly (whose other roles include chairing Southern District Health Board’s endoscopy user group) to come up with a national plan by September for what is being called ‘‘planned care’’ — appointmen­ts or procedures that are not urgent (although the longsuffer­ing patient might feel otherwise) and can therefore be scheduled or planned.

The figures on the list are astounding. In March nearly 36,000 people had been waiting longer than four months to have their first appointmen­t with a hospital specialist to assess their condition, more than twice as many as in the February before the pandemic measures struck.

The number of patients waiting longer than four months for treatment has more than trebled, from 8153 in February 2020 to 26,764.

Health Minister Andrew Little boldly says this new, national approach to specialist appointmen­ts and plannedcar­e operations will get rid of the postcode lottery that has seen people treated differentl­y in different parts of the country once and for all.

It makes sense for Mr Little to be seen to be doing something about this issue now rather than leave it until the dismantlin­g of the DHBs which, if all goes to plan, is mere months away.

But there will be considerab­le hurdles to overcome, not least ongoing shortstaff­ing around the country.

Greater use of private hospitals to undertake some standard procedures, rather than calling on them in desperatio­n as has happened in the past when public hospitals were snowed under, should allow for the developmen­t of longterm contracts with more sensible prices.

There will have to be good communicat­ion between public and private hospitals and clear understand­ing about responsibi­lity for postoperat­ive care.

The notion more people than usual will have to travel to other parts of the country for timely treatment may not always be welcomed by patients, for a variety of reasons, and we would hope it would not be presented as a take it or leave it choice. What funding might be provided to support patients who travel and their families will also have to be spelled out.

Many on existing waiting lists are likely to wait a while longer to see much action. While it is good to see emphasis on better access to effective alternativ­es to surgery, some may be dismayed at this if they have their hearts set on surgery and consider they have already exhausted other possible remedies.

However the taskforce’s plan pans out, this national approach is a sign of things to come under the health reforms. And, like any big health issue, it runs the risk of becoming more about politics than patient care.

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Andrew Little

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