Rotorua Daily Post

‘Horrific’: Toomanycan­cers pickedupin­hospitaled

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- Felix Desmarais

Atop doctor says she has never had to diagnose so much cancer as she has in Rotorua Hospital’s emergency department since starting there 18 months ago.

And Dr Suzanne Moran says the emergency department “is not the right place to be telling someone they have cancer”.

“I have never diagnosed so much cancer in the emergency department as I have here at Lakes.”

Moran’s comments were made in a presentati­on to the Lakes District Health Board and followed the board’s unusual step last week to call for people to only attend the emergency department if symptoms were urgent, stating the emergency department at Rotorua was “swamped”.

Speaking to Local Democracy Reporting this week, Moran— who previously worked in emergency medicine in the UK and worked for eight years in New Zealand — said people often didn’t see chronic symptoms such as weight loss, changes in bowel habits or a smoker’s cough as possible symptoms of cancer until its advanced stages, at which point they would go to the emergency department.

“So they don’t realise, or sometimes it takes a wha¯nau member to actually say ‘look, I’m really worried about you, we need to get you some help’.”

Additional­ly, with more people heading to ED rather than their GP for nonemergen­cy medical care, it meant cancer diagnoses were picked up there, rather than by a GP.

“We might end up being the people that do the chest x-ray which shows the lung cancer, or we might be the ones that flag the concern that they’ve got a bowel cancer.”

She said diagnoses can occur in emergency department­s: “Sometimes it’s just patently obvious.”

Moran said it was “horrible” to have to tell someone they had cancer in ED.

“We are trained to give bad news, but sitting somebody down and explaining a cancer diagnosis — when we then don’t have the

answers about what would happen next, or who we’re going to refer them to, or what the treatment’s going to involve — is really really hard on everybody, but particular­ly on the patient.

“You want to be able to take your time with patients like this and be able to answer their questions and give them some time to process. Time is something we don’t have a lot of in the emergency department.”

Lakes DHB chief operating officer Alan Wilson said the percentage of people diagnosed in the emergency department as opposed to general practice was reported nationally and population­s in poor or high deprivatio­n areas — such as Lakes — tended to rate highly for diagnoses in emergency department­s. In some other communitie­s, almost all cancer patients were diagnosed through their GP, he said.

Wilson said the key message for the community was to go early to GPS when symptoms arose and to take part in screening programmes.

“The reality is that the data ... says that people who are diagnosed in ED do worse because they are presenting worse, they’ve got an advanced cancer, versus an early one.”

Te Aho o Te Kahu the Cancer Control Agency chief executive Diana Sarfati said nationally, more than 30 per cent of patients with colorectal cancer were diagnosed after presentati­on at an emergency department.

Nearly half of all people registered with lung, ovary, liver and stomach cancers were diagnosed following an ED presentati­on, she said.

“The proportion of emergency diagnosis is even higher for some of the less common cancers — like pancreatic cancer. Approximat­ely 60 per cent of all pancreatic cancer registrati­ons are diagnosed after presentati­on at ED.”

Diagnosing any cancer at the earliest possible stage was “vitally important”, she said.

She encouraged people concerned about their health to discuss it with their GP.

“We also strongly encourage people to participat­e in screening programmes for which they are eligible. We know diagnosis at ED is not ideal, as the cancer is often more advanced and later diagnosis impacts on treatment options and successful outcomes.”

Te Aho o Te Kahu was actively monitoring the proportion of lung and bowel cancer patients who are diagnosed through emergency department­s at each district health board

“The agency will be extending this work to monitor other cancers over the next 12 months.”

Rotorua Aroha Mai Cancer Support Services founder and manager Bubsie Macfarlane said the underlying issues driving overstretc­hed emergency department­s— and the cancer diagnoses within them — were similar.

Macfarlane said if late-stage cancer was being diagnosed at the ED that would be “a horrific thing for a person to take in”.

“It’s a bombshell.”

She said many poorer people, particular­ly Ma¯ori, were likely to put off going to their GP because they were “just trying to survive”.

For some, it’s a choice of going to the doctor or putting food on the table, she said.

Macfarlane knew a lot of people who caught their cancer later than they otherwise would have as a result.

“Then one day, they’re so crook they end up in ED . . . because they don’t have to pay.”

Macfarlane said if screening programmes were more prominent that would help, as well as improvemen­ts in health promotion.

She said the health system needed to work with Ma¯ori more in order to increase the likelihood of earlier diagnoses.

“For Ma¯ori it’s very personal when it comes to the body, and some doctors and nurses don’t understand that. They don’t have an understand­ing of how Indigenous people accept things and what might be taboo.

“Unless you understand the culture you can’t understand the person.”

She said Ma¯ori had to play a role as well: “Ma¯ori need to look after Ma¯ori.”

Cancer Society medical director Dr Chris Jackson said emergency presentati­on for cancer was “clearly a concern”.

He said patients diagnosed in emergency usually had a “more extensive disease” at diagnosis, which could have worse outcomes.

Gut cancers, such as pancreatic cancer, had a high rate of emergency presentati­on, he said.

There was regional variation in the rates of emergency presentati­on which could reflect poorer access to primary care or secondary care diagnostic services, he said.

Lakes DHB strategy, planning and funding director Karen Evison said emergency department­s were under pressure in part due to formerly stagnant funding versus a growing population.

“You’ve just got more people accessing what was a capped health system.

“Our population’s grown quite significan­tly and we haven’t built significan­t new health infrastruc­ture.

“Plus, our population generally is getting unhealthie­r — obesity, smoking-related illness.”

She said health was an area that was “always going to gobble money” as it sought to keep up with population and technologi­cal demands, but more funding alone would not fix the issue.

“We need to think differentl­y about what workforces we use, what places we go to, how we engage people to want to take health-enabling steps as opposed to waiting until they’re really unwell.”

Evison said such system-wide change was expected from the 2020 Health and Disability System Review which she understood was being “pushed through at pace now”.

She said agencies could work together — and were already attempting to — to address barriers to healthcare such as cost.

Moran said there was no “magic pill” to address the pressure on EDS.

“It needs to be a system-wide, well thought-out, smart solution that doesn’t just continue to do what we’ve been doing but actually starts to think differentl­y.”

She said on particular­ly busy weekends, there might be 20 people in the waiting room at Rotorua Hospital and every cubicle in the treatment area full.

“Sometimes you just feel like you’re spinning plates. That is the skill of the emergency nurse [or] doctor . . . but when we reach that tipping point like we reached a few weeks ago, it becomes impossible.

“You sometimes feel that you are just firefighti­ng, and firefighti­ng is not a great way to practise medicine ... to just run from one crisis to another.”

She said there were strategies in place to mitigate that risk and offload the system.

“Unfortunat­ely we have to focus on the most sick and the most injured in the department.”

She said she and the health board had heard feedback from people last week on why they had to rely on the ED for treatment and that it was being listened to.

At the health board meeting last Friday, board member Ngahihi Bidois said if more medical staff could speak te reo, or at least pronounce Ma¯ori correctly, it would be “a good place to start” to make hospitals more welcoming for Ma¯ori, and therefore helping address poor health outcomes for tangata whenua.

Board member Merepeka Raukawa-tait said she believed it would be useful to place “someone really linked in [who] speaks Ma¯ori and is Ma¯ori” in the ED waiting room to help explain resources, processes and navigating the health system to people.

“We’ve been talking about it for some time. It’s time to be raising these issues and fearlessly addressing them.”

 ?? PHOTO/ ANDREWWARN­ER ?? Head of Emergency Department Dr Suzanne Moran (left) and Lakes Dhbstrateg­y, planning and funding director Karen Evison.
PHOTO/ ANDREWWARN­ER Head of Emergency Department Dr Suzanne Moran (left) and Lakes Dhbstrateg­y, planning and funding director Karen Evison.
 ?? PHOTO/ FILE ?? Aroha Mai Cancer Support founder Bubsie Macfarlane.
PHOTO/ FILE Aroha Mai Cancer Support founder Bubsie Macfarlane.

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