Showing posts with label Grafton Base Hospital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grafton Base Hospital. Show all posts

Monday, 19 June 2023

NSW Nurses and Midwives Association, June 2023: between Grafton and Maclean Hospitals another 40 nurses are needed to provide adequate staffing levels

 

Grafton Base Hospital is a Level 3/4 rural community hospital with an est. 68 bed inpatient capacity which provides acute medical, surgical, orthopaedic, paediatric, anaesthetic, geriatric, obstetric and maternity, intensive and critical care, renal, oncology, palliative care, emergency, some specialist outpatient services and day surgery facilities. Maclean District Hospital is a Level 3 rural community hospital with an est. <43 inpatient bed capacity, an inpatient Rehabilitation Unit and a Day Surgery Unit.


Clarence Valley Independent, 14 June 2023:


Between Grafton and Maclean Hospitals another 40 nurses are needed to provide adequate staffing levels say the NSW Nurses and Midwives Association as the Local Health District tries to fill 180 nursing vacancies across the region.


NSW Nurses and Midwives Association Clarence Valley branch secretary Thea Koval said without agency nursing staff being called in, who are paid significantly more than NSW Health nurses, Maclean and Grafton hospitals would struggle to operate.


Without agency nursing staff our hospitals would not be able to be run with the nurses employed only by NSW Health,” she said.


Without that external agency support we would be completely drowning, there just would not be enough staff.”


Ms Koval said both Grafton and Maclean hospitals are continuing to experience increasing numbers of patients presenting to the emergency department ED, which leads to increasing wait times until they are treated.


This combined with the lack of nursing staff, Ms Koval said is leading to a decline in patient care.


We are constantly and have been for the last 10 years saying that the amount of staff we have is not enough to provide the care we are expected to our patients,” she said.


That can range anywhere from not being able to provide a shower, so there’s patients going without showers on the wards, to people waiting excessive amounts of time in ED to be seen by a nurse, or once they’re seen by a nurse waiting for pain relief, waiting to be helped to the toilet or delays in getting antibiotics.”


Ms Koval said the frustrating lack of staff led to nurses striking four times last year.


We raise the issue through to our managers, we try and raise it with the Ministry of Health and so far, nothing has changed,” she said.


This new government has promised to introduce the ratio system, which they termed ‘safe staffing’ but that hasn’t happened yet.”


Ms Koval said the planned ratios are one nurse to three patients in ED, with a dedicated resuscitation nurse, a dedicated triage nurse and a dedicated team leader on all shifts.


That would make a massive difference to Grafton and Maclean Hospitals, particularly on our night shifts when our staffing drops from seven nurses to three nurses, and more often than not these days the ED is full of patients,” she said.


As Queensland Health have implemented nurse to patient ratios, where nurses experience better conditions and earn $10 an hour more than in NSW, Ms Koval said a number of local nurses have left to work over the border.


As a result, the Northern NSW Local Health District has confirmed there are 180 full time equivalent nursing vacancies across the region.


Grafton and Maclean hospitals have approximately 40 of those vacancies,” Ms Koval said.


That is just to make it back up to what the government currently considers as reasonable staffing levels…and when this new ‘safe staffing’ comes in as promised, that level of vacancies will increase.”


Ms Koval said staff shortages extend to the number of local doctors, as two surgeons have recently left Grafton hospital without being replaced and locums are regularly called in to fill positions in Grafton and Maclean hospitals.


It’s a very large expense (for locums) but it’s what you have to do otherwise you don’t have medical coverage,” she said……


Read the full article here.


Wednesday, 8 February 2023

Show Us The Money, Perrottet!

 

Fool us once, shame on you; fool us twice, shame on us. Try to fool us a third time, then your vote count drops on Saturday 25 March 2023.


Clarence Valley Independent, 1 February 2023, excerpt:


The unveiling of the master plan for the $264 million redevelopment of Grafton Base Hospital (GBH) has been described by Des Harvey of the Grafton Base Hospital Community Committee (GBHCC) as a miniscule step forward.


The Minister and others might think it’s a major step, but in our opinion, there is still no funding other than just a mention of funding,” he said.


There is a promise of $263.8 million, but that has been around for too many years.


We’ve also had a promise that construction will commence before March 2023, and we know that’s not going to happen.


We’re still talking about planning.


In my opinion, and that of many people I speak to in the community, the planning really was completed back in 2015, and that’s the reason that the government was able to come up with a figure of $263.8 million, so they knew specifically how many nails, screws and alike were involved in the job…..


 But as far as I can see, there is no money in the budget for it, and until there is money in the budget, nothing happens,” he recalled.


Wednesday, 1 February 2023

From Berejiklian in 2018 through to Perrottet in 2023 - the many promises made by the NSW Coalition Government to fund redevelopment of Grafton Base Hospital

 

THE IDENTIFIED NEED



The Daily Examiner, 31 July 2018, p.1:


Grafton Base Hospital will offer inpatient mental health services when a $263.8million redevelopment is funded.

For the first time the Northern NSW Local Health District has made the hospital its number one priority in its Asset Strategic Plan for 2018/19.



The Daily Examiner, 20 October 2018, p.4:


In July the Northern NSW Local Health District made a rebuild of the hospital its top priority for the coming year at a cost of $263.8million.

It’s report on the priority listing noted the hospital was close to capacity with inpatient beds, emergency, renal dialysis and chemotherapy infrastructure expected to reach capacity by 2022 and infrastructure for ambulatory care services was to reach capacity in 2020.

It also noted the construction of Australia’s largest jail, due for completion south of Grafton at the end of 2020, would also place stresses on the region’s health services.



The Daily Examiner, 22 November 2018, p.5:


Clarence Valley Council has also thrown its support behind the redevelopment of the Grafton Base Hospital.

It will write to the premier, deputy premier, minister for health, and member for Clarence Chris Gulaptis expressing its support for the $263.8m redevelopment.



THE HALF-PROMISES BEGIN


The Daily Examiner, 8 December 2018, p.22:


More hospital funding remains in his sights with the potential $268 million rebuild of the tired piece of infrastructure.


The Daily Examiner, 19 December 2018, p. 9:

Mr Gulaptis said he was continuing to pressure the government to allocate the $268 million funding for the hospital…..



THE REPETITIVE PROMISES


Clarence Valley Independent, 13 March 2019:


Gulaptis promise of $263m Grafton Hospital overhaul


The Daily Examiner, 21 June 2019, p.3: 


The $263 million commitment to the Grafton Base Hospital redevelopment was made in the final weeks of the campaign in March and is just one of many major infrastructure promises outlined in the 2019-20 Budget Papers. However, there there was no specific line item in the 2019-20 Budget and Nationals MP Chris Gulaptis was quick to point out it would take time.”


The Daily Mercury, 31 July 2020:










HEALTH NEEDS CONTINUE UNMET



North Coast Voices, 21 February 2021:


PUBLIC HOSPITAL ELECTIVE SURGERY MEDIAN WAITING TIMES IN NORTH-EAST NSW......

Grafton Base Hospital:

Hip replacement - the median wait was 6 days in 2011-12 and blew out to 77 days by 2017-18 and latest figures for 2019-20 stand at 67 days.

Total knee replacement - the median wait was 10 days in 2011-12 and blew out to 145 days by 2017-18 and latest figures for 2019-20 stand at 135 days.

Shoulder joint replacement - the wait was 8 days in 2016-17 and blew out to 11 days by 2017-18 and latest figures for 2019-20 stand at less than 5 days.

Ophthalmology - the median wait was 285 days in 2011-12 and latest figures for 2019-20 stand at 326 days, the highest median waiting time in the last nine financial years.

Between July and September 2020 a total of 652 unspecified elective surgery procedures were performed.


Clarence Valley Independent, 10 August 2022: 


The Clarence Valley Independent hit the streets last week and asked members of the public to share their thoughts after the Northern NSW Local Health District (NNSWLHD) revealed Grafton Base Hospital (GBH) had no on-site obstetrician, or available locums to cover shortages, and subsequently, expectant and birthing mothers were being referred to Lismore Base Hospital and Coffs Harbour Health Campus.

The NNSWLHD released a second statement two days later, announcing staff had altered their rosters to ensure previously advised gaps in specialist obstetrician cover were filled.....


THE PROMISES CONTINUE AND SO DO THE PROBLEMS

NSW Nationals, media release, 25 January 2023:


Regional Health and Mental Health Minister Bronnie Taylor, Nationals’ Member for Clarence Chris Gulaptis, and Nationals’ candidate for Clarence Richie Williamson have announced a major step forward in the $264 million Grafton Base Hospital redevelopment.



ABC News, 25 January 2023:


After her knee replacement surgery was cancelled twice last year, Yamba woman Rosalind Walsh could not bear to think it might happen again.


The 72-year-old was scheduled this week for orthopaedic work at Grafton Base Hospital in northern New South Wales, but was called on the day by hospital management asking her to stay home.


"They just said, 'We don't have a bed'," Ms Walsh said.


"They said, 'We can't do the surgery, but you're still booked in'."


Anaesthetist & former Grafton Medical Staff Council chair Allan Tyson said there were real repercussions for people who missed out.


"It is common," he said.


"We have to say, 'Sorry, you have to go home because the surgery can't be done'.


"It's not just elective surgery, if you can't walk."


Dr Tyson said the Grafton hospital was operating well beyond its capacity.


"We've got 18 patients in a ward today that is funded for eight patients," he said.


"Last week our fly-in surgeon missed out on three or four joint surgeries that we should have done, but didn't have the bed space.


"In the end, it's our patients that miss out."


For Rosalind Walsh, however, a long wait outside the hospital was worth it.


The ABC understands hospital management was able to redirect patients from the emergency department, resulting in a spare bed so Ms Walsh could have her knee surgery & recover in hospital.


Paid doctors with nowhere to work


Northern NSW Local Health District chief executive Wayne Jones said surgeons, including those flying in to regional hospitals to help reduce elective surgery waitlists, were at times unable to operate.


"As chief executive it hurts to the bone to pay money I'm not getting a return on," he said.


"The reality is at times you can't avoid that.


"There is [an] unprecedented bed block that we're experiencing."


Mr Jones said administrators were planning as much as they could.


"It is worth noting that we're seeing a real decline in those overdue waits, over the last four or five months, as we're starting to develop more models of care," he said.


"We're doing surgery in our smaller facilities, we're freeing up beds & facilities in places like Grafton, so we are getting through more."


NSW Regional Health Minister Bronnie Taylor visited the hospital this week to commit to a new $274-million new hospital in Grafton — a similar pledge to a 2019 state election promise…...