Doctors and nurses at Lakes District Hospital have concerns
about the Southland District Health Board's (SDHB) proposed
shake up of Wakatipu health services.
In an anonymous statement emailed to the Otago Daily
Times, the doctors and nurses said more time was needed
to clarify unanswered questions in the proposal.
Attempts to contact the sender were unsuccessful yesterday,
but a staff member at the hospital confirmed the email was a
group statement by all the doctors and nurses employed by the
SDHB at the hospital.
"We are surprised and concerned that so much progress has
been made without the involvement of local hospital doctors,
rural hospital or emergency medicine specialists," the
statement said.
The SDHB's consultation document "Delivering Wakatipu Health
Services in The Future" proposes to refurbish Lakes District
Hospital into an Integrated Family Health Centre (IFHC).
The staff statement said the health centre be a "progressive
solution" for Queenstown, but only if it was structured
correctly.
"We have concerns that many questions are unanswered in this
proposal and we believe the community should demand clear
answers and commitments," it said.
Staff were concerned Queenstown patients might not have
access to free emergency healthcare under the new model.
The SDHB is proposing for patients be assessed by a general
practitioner before being admitted to the emergency
department. Anyone who could be treated by a general
practitioner would have to pay for that medical care.
Other questions included whether the health centre would
include a hospital secondary service.
"The IFHC will expand GP services [primary care] and day
surgery, but this may actually be at the expense of our acute
inpatient beds. This would reduce our ability to treat local
people in Queenstown," it says.
It also questioned whether the IFHC was future-proofed for an
increase in demand and if it would affect the number of
patients having to be transported away from Queenstown.
"We are concerned that the proposal only mentions the
expansion of primary care. However, a rapidly expanding
population will inevitably lead to increased demand for
secondary hospital services ... A primary care model is not
sufficient," it says.
By investing in a hospital-level service in Queenstown the
need to transfer patients away could be reduced.
The staff also wanted to know if the model had been
successfully trialled elsewhere, whether it would work, how
much it would cost, and who would pay.
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