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Where will the debate about waiting
lists and crowded emergency departments end?
Published in The Age 7 February
2006
Where will
the debate about waiting lists and crowded emergency departments end? It really
starts in the wards of public hospitals where patients who should be in nursing
homes or hostels can't find a place, where patients who should have been managed
well in their homes or nursing homes couldn't get good primary care and became
so sick they needed admission, where doctors frustrated with the poor capacity
of the hospital leave for the easier and more lucrative publicly financed
"private" hospitals.
If there are no beds, cancellations
have to happen, and patients must wait in emergency departments on trolleys. If
waiting times for surgery are over a year and multiple cancellations still
happen, it's a further blow to morale amongst staff and a further incentive to
move to the taxpayer funded private system.
It won't end
until these factors are sorted, and unfortunately most of these factors are
largely the responsibility of the Federal Government whose best idea to date
seems to be a hotline which will not touch the problem as it only deals with
minor illnesses, not the root causes of our public hospitals' woes.
Dr Tim Woodruff
President
Doctors Reform Society
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