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Medical Health Aged Care

NSW health stats underscore need for health reform

The Australian College of Nursing 2 mins read

The Australian College of Nursing (ACN) says the latest report from the New South Wales Bureau of Health Information (BHI) confirms the urgent need for widespread health sector reform.

The BHI’s January-March report clearly illustrates the pressures that nurses and their colleagues are under, with near-record demand for ED care and ballooning elective surgery lists.

“Despite the overall picture of a system under stress, it’s great to see that nurses and their ED team members are improving handover times, with a 4.7 percentage point increase in the proportion of patients handed over from ambulance to ED staff within 30 minutes,” Acting ACN CEO, Dr Zachary Byfield, said.

“But it’s unconscionable that 8,587 patients are waiting beyond clinically safe timeframes for surgery.”

ACN says the report adds weight to the need for all governments to invest more in preventive and primary health care, as recommended by Justice Richard Beasley in the Special Commission of Inquiry into Healthcare Funding, released last month.

“We welcome NSW Health Minister Ryan Park’s announcement of $23 million to cut overdue surgeries, but the NSW government must look at the bigger picture urgently,” Dr Byfield said.

“Justice Beasley found the lack of preventive and primary care in the NSW health system was “beyond [his] comprehension.

“What we are seeing in the BHI figures is a culmination of the failure to prevent chronic conditions and primary care delivery. Urgent change is needed to save our hospitals from continuing to struggle to care for people with complex, multi-morbidities.

“It is a fiction that primary health care is only the preserve of the Commonwealth. Just look at the success of nurse-led walk-in clinics in the ACT and the key leadership role of nurses in Urgent Care Clinics nationally to see how better use of the health workforce improves patient access to the care they need.

 

“We urge the NSW government to undertake the required regulatory reform and fund innovative primary care models, including those led by nurses, to increase and improve primary care to our people and communities.

 

“Registered nurses across Australia will soon be able to have prescribing powers: we need to prepare the ground to harness the enormous effects on population health that this could have.

“It will require investment to bring about change, but the dividends will be huge – to patients, to quality of lives, and to health budgets.

“ACN urges the NSW government to invest some of the $23 million in workforce, including perioperative nursing staff.

“Every day of delay for the 8,587 patients waiting far too long for surgery represents potential clinical deterioration, increased anxiety, and compromised quality of life.

“Our perioperative nurses are not just managing surgical procedures – they're providing psychological support, monitoring deteriorating conditions, and advocating for patients trapped in an overwhelmed system.”


Contact details:

Lexi Metherell 0449 803 524

Email: [email protected]

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