Elderly patients forced to sit on floor

Julie Morton
Julie Morton

Older patients were forced to sit on the floor while waiting for an appointment in the crisis-hit eye department at Dunedin Hospital, prompting a complaint from staff to their union.

Public Service Association organiser Julie Morton said the lack of adequate waiting space was a health and safety issue.

"There are frequently not enough seats in the waiting room to accommodate those waiting, and they have to sit on the floor," Mrs Morton wrote to the Southern District Health Board last month.

Some of the patients who had to sit on the floor were older people.

The board is urgently seeing overdue patients after delays in Dunedin and Invercargill caused 38 patients to lose part of their sight.

The department saw 140 patients in a single day last month.

Mrs Morton said administration staff were not adequately supported to cope with the numbers.

"They’re working now at incredibly high capacity, with no relief, in what appears to be a crisis situation."

Yesterday, Mrs Morton still had not received a response to her June 15 letter. In a response to the Otago Daily Times, chief medical officer Nigel Millar apologised to patients "inconvenienced or distressed" by the overcrowding.

Dr Nigel Millar
Dr Nigel Millar

"In this instance we learned at short notice that two additional specialists were available in early June, and decided to make the most of this opportunity to ensure 140 more patients could receive the treatment they required.

"It was unfortunate the additional seating that had been ordered did not arrive in time for this clinic, and again we apologise for any discomfort this caused," Dr Millar said.

Dr Millar could not say how many patients were still overdue for appointments because an external review recommended changing the way they were counted.

"Once this methodology is adopted, we will provide an update of the number of patients whose appointments are overdue," Dr Millar said.

Separately, Health Minister Jonathan Coleman’s office released a progress report, written in April by senior health officials, about SDHB’s ophthalmology problem.

It said two nurses were being trained to inject Avastin, a common eye procedure. Efforts to recruit optometrists to work alongside the hospital’s ophthalmologists had been unsuccessful, making it difficult to clear the waiting list. 

The board was considering an offer from South Canterbury District Health Board to see 10 patients a  week, the report said.

Comments

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Underfund it, run it down and unsurprisingly you can't attract staff.

Oh dear, could they not have just hired or relocated seating in the meantime. The ordered seating did not arrive, so no alternative measure. LOL

They aren't sure how many patients there are because they changed the way they count them! What, they have gone from an abacus to a calculator or what?
The former CEO really earned her $500k a year didn't she.

Surely to God they could have found some seats somewhere in the hospital.
They will be sharing beds next.

I can't help feeling this is an exaggeration,what with all the cell phone-cameras about how come there is not one photo to substantiate this claim.
Elderly people sitting on a hospital floor,i don't think so.

I do think so. Having spent many hours in the eye dept waiting room I can vouch for the crowding. Today however the new chairs were there and they are comfortable. Staff seem to be increased and things were working well. The place is far too small and it must be hell for staff to work in. They do well.

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