Waikato Times

Surgical building cannot open due to lack of staff

- Rowan Quinn of RNZ

A brand new surgical building the size of a provincial hospital is sitting empty on the grounds of North Shore Hospital, its opening delayed and no new date set.

There are lights on and hospital beds in place in the four-storey, 150-bed Tōtara Haumaru building, but it could be months before there are patients.

It did not have the staff it needed, and the amount of money allocated to run it for the next financial year had not been decided.

The $300m facility, with eight operating theatres, was always intended to be opened in stages but the first stage – the ground and first floor – was initially supposed to open last December, then this month

Now, Te Whatu Ora/Health NZ head of hospital and specialist services Fiona Dougan would only say “mid-year” for stage one.

“We don't have the total number of staff required, along with the work, to open the facility. So it's a blend about staffing and work.’’

There was not even a rough date for when the entire facility would be operationa­l.

“We don't have a date for it to be fully up and running because that is a long-term strategy requiring us to be funded for additional work so that we can make the best use of the full capacity.’’

Funding to run the building for the next financial year (24/25) was still being decided.

“That budget process is in place at the moment,’’ Dougan said.

RNZ understood doctors at the hospital were frustrated by the delay in getting the building into action as surgical waitlists grew.

One said they were looking over at the brand new facility every day with no idea when they would get to use it. They worried staffing it would be a problem, with big shortages in many areas of the health sector, particular­ly anaestheti­c technician­s.

General Surgeons' Associatio­n president Vanessa Blair said recruiting for an entire surgical facility would be a big undertakin­g – including cleaners, anaestheti­sts, surgeons and more.

“You have your theatre staff, these are people who sterilise instrument­s, then there's nurses, there's anaestheti­c techs ... surgery is a team endeavour.’’

As well, cover was needed to make sure patients were cared for overnight, she said.

Dougan said recruiting enough staff was one factor affecting timing of when the building would become fully operationa­l. Some would come from within the organisati­on, while work had begun recruiting others.

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