The Northern Advocate

Health staff face extreme pressure, admits Health Minister

- Nicholas Jones

The Health Minister has admitted there were gaps in hospital preparatio­ns for the Delta outbreak and that frontline workers are under “extraordin­ary pressure” in the latest phase of the pandemic.

In an exclusive interview with the Weekend Herald, Andrew Little acknowledg­ed the strain could continue even if high immunisati­on coverage is achieved, because variants such as Delta will put the unvaccinat­ed minority at significan­t risk.

The workforce is “not only having to deal with and adapt to responding to the Covid virus, but also, it is an understaff­ed system, there are a large number of vacancies, and public expectatio­n about being kept safe is very high,”

Little said. “I get very disturbed when I get the stories, and there have been a lot of them, of nurses and other clinicians finishing their shifts absolutely exhausted, and finding it really hard to go back to work the next day.

“There is a lot of thinking about how we effectivel­y respond. But actually what we need to do is build the workforce to the level it needs to be, and work on procedures that will keep them safe, both physically and mentally as well.”

Overall, district health boards had done extraordin­ary work preparing for the current and future outbreaks, he said, but “some things I think could have been done a little better.”

That included increasing intensive care capacity.

The Government has bought more ventilator­s and funded extra ICU beds, but specialist­s say actual dayto-day capacity hasn’t improved since the pandemic began. That’s because each patient needs one-to-one care by an ICU nurse. The nurses need years of training and experience and earn more overseas, including in Australia.

DHBs have emergency plans to scale up ICU capacity, including by seconding other staff to help under supervisio­n.

This week Auckland hospitals asked for up to 30 ICU nurses to be sent from elsewhere in the country to help manage workload increased by Delta.

“There was extra funding provided last year, and an online module for more nurses to do ICU learning, so that they could go into an ICU environmen­t if they were called for,” Little said. “Some DHBs got on top of it. Others haven’t so much.

“And I have been working with the ministry in the last couple weeks just to make sure we have a programme of work in the months ahead.”

Another area that will be a focus is ensuring DHBs fit their staff for respirator masks, Little said.

The Weekend Herald recently revealed nurses at Auckland City Hospital who were yet to be fitted for a mask were nonetheles­s being asked to wear them.

The fitting process takes about 20 minutes and is important to make sure airborne particles can’t get through.

Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins confirmed last month to the Herald that he had asked officials for advice on making the Pfizer vaccine mandatory for health workers in contact with confirmed Covid-19 cases.

Little indicated that mandatory order could be much broader and encompass much of the frontline health workforce. A decision would likely be made in the next few weeks, he said.

“We have been talking to health unions about that.

“When you just think about the level of risk, particular­ly in hospitals and other healthcare facilities, and now with these new variants upon us, and we have seen the impact of the Delta variant, we do have to take seriously the way we protect that frontline health workforce.”

National’s health spokesman, Dr Shane Reti, said yesterday that the Government should explain why more ICU bed spaces weren’t secured in the five months since Delta first appeared in MIQ facilities.

“Labour has clearly failed to listen to experts and the internatio­nal experience in dealing with a Delta outbreak,” Reti said. “Despite the country now in the midst of such an outbreak, it still doesn’t have a plan to build up our ICU capacity, putting New Zealand lives at risk.”

National also wants visa categories to be reopened and residence applicatio­ns prioritise­d for critical healthcare workers, as well as offering residence class visas on arrival to experience­d nurses.

Shortly before this outbreak nearly 30,000 Kiwis were waiting too long for hospital attention. DHBs have estimated more than 4500 planned procedures have been postponed so far, not including first specialist appointmen­ts and followups.

Said Little: “Even before this lockdown there were still some postponeme­nts that had to be managed. And this lockdown will cause some more.

“The DHBs are, as I observe it, co-ordinating a lot more with the help of the ministry as well, and are trying to get through those procedures.”

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Andrew Little

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