People urged to stay away unless it is an emergency

  • last year
Returning now to the strain on Tasmania’s health system. Tasmanians are being urged to stay from the state's two biggest hospitals unless it's an emergency.

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00 It's really tough times and unfortunately all our staff in our major hospitals have
00:06 been under considerable pressure over the last couple of years.
00:09 COVID of course hasn't helped.
00:11 A surge in influenza earlier in the year has put the pressure on.
00:15 Sadly, we've got a really substantial surge of baby boomers at the moment with a lot of
00:22 older people being sicker with more complicated problems and requiring more and more hospital
00:27 admissions.
00:29 So this call to stay away, that's come from the health department, so to be clear the
00:33 government.
00:34 What do the hospital staff and unions think of the situation that the hospitals now find
00:40 themselves in?
00:42 Sadly this is a 20 year problem.
00:45 We could have predicted that the baby boomers would be requiring more hospital services
00:49 as time progresses.
00:50 We always get surges during winter.
00:53 We knew this was going to happen and sadly we haven't prepared appropriately for it.
00:57 It's hard to put figures on it and you use all these adjectives to describe it but in
01:02 reality in a 24 bed emergency department in Hobart last night at 11pm we had 32 people
01:10 waiting for beds in the hospital.
01:11 We had patients who were admitted straight from the ambulances in the ramping being grabbed
01:16 outside going straight to hospital beds.
01:20 Sadly we are underprepared and understaffed and just not ready for this surge that's happening
01:26 at the moment.
01:27 It's often the cases that we hear that really hit home better than those numbers.
01:32 We're hearing of people with spinal injuries for example waiting hours for treatment.
01:36 Again our ambulances are blocked by being stuck in that ramping at the hospitals there.
01:43 Ramping four, five, six hours.
01:44 It's not uncommon and it's a terrible waste of resources and better planning, better organisation
01:51 and boosting our staff and boosting our resources is the only answer Gemma.
01:59 Speaking of staff, it has been said that a lot of staff are off sick at the moment.
02:03 Is that true and to what extent is that contributing to this acute situation that we're seeing?
02:08 It's certainly not helping.
02:10 We've had three years of COVID and whether we like it or not things are a lot better
02:14 but they're still not right.
02:15 We've had plenty of influenza this year as well and of course staff are burnt out.
02:21 70% of ED staff and ICU staff are measured as suffering from burnout.
02:29 These guys just don't have the resilience to tolerate the surge in pressure that's happening
02:34 down here at the moment.
02:35 We're just under prepared.
02:37 We're just not ready for what's going on at the moment.
02:40 Would you say that the issues are what other states are dealing with or are they localised?
02:45 They're certainly local at the moment for Tassie but other states we know are under
02:50 pressure as well.
02:53 It's not like a factory production line where you can dial up sick people or dial down sick
02:57 people.
02:58 Sadly we've just got to respond to community need.
03:01 That spinal case for example, accidents happen.
03:05 They're not predictable.
03:06 It's hard to know exactly what's going to happen in an ED department so we need that
03:10 extra capacity to cope with these surges but we don't have it at the moment.
03:15 And so do you think people should adhere to this advice to not turn up or do you think
03:19 they will?
03:20 I mean we know that some people shouldn't be presenting to emergency in the first place
03:24 but also for those who should be there can be flow on effects if they don't, right?
03:29 Yes, sadly we really need people to seek medical help and seek appropriate medical help.
03:36 It's one thing to say that was just a simple case of indigestion but occasionally indigestion
03:40 will be a cardiac arrest, a cardiac incident, a heart attack.
03:46 We just don't know with medicine.
03:48 It is a complicated, difficult area requiring considerable expertise.
03:55 It's fine to say that person shouldn't have presented after the event but we still need
04:01 people to turn up.
04:03 We don't want people to stay away if they're crook.
04:06 Telling people not to turn up, I mean it's not a long term solution.
04:08 What do you want to see from authorities now?
04:12 Well I could be here all day Gemma talking about that.
04:15 We need to boost the primary care.
04:17 We need to keep people out of hospitals.
04:19 We need to clear the log jam so we need appropriate funding to get people through the system.
04:24 We've got people stuck in Tassie and across Australia with just waiting for nursing homes,
04:30 waiting for NDIS support.
04:33 Simple acute beds are being held up by blocks in the system.
04:38 We need to clear the log jam.
04:39 We're only going to do it if we work on every facet of the health system.
04:44 Sadly Gemma it's not a quick fix.
04:46 We need to work on multiple areas.
04:48 Dr John Saul, head of the AMA Tasmania, thank you for speaking with us.
04:52 Thanks for raising these important issues Gemma.
04:55 Let's get roll up our sleeves and get to work on them.
04:57 [BLANK_AUDIO]

Recommended