Patients wait too long for life-saving care – report

Original article by Nicole Hasham
The Sydney Morning Herald – Page: 11 : 10-Dec-14

The Auditor-General’s office in New South Wales (NSW) has issued the latest survey of public hospital emergency department performance. It shows an improvement on 2013, despite a rise in patient numbers to close to 2.7 million. However waiting times at hospitals in the Sydney, Central Coast and Western NSW health districts were unacceptably long, as the facilities failed to meet the standard of four fifths of patients being treated within 10 minutes. Ambulance response times meanwhile have fallen to 10.8 minutes, in the biggest improvement since 2009

CORPORATES
NEW SOUTH WALES. AUDITOR GENERAL’S DEPT, NEW SOUTH WALES. MINISTRY OF HEALTH, GOSFORD HOSPITAL, ROYAL PRINCE ALFRED HOSPITAL, CONCORD HOSPITAL, CANTERBURY HOSPITAL, AMBULANCE SERVICE OF NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY

Hospital delay puts system to alert public under scrutiny

Original article by James Robertson
The Sydney Morning Herald – Page: 7 : 7-Jan-15

New South Wales Health Minister Jillian Skinner and Danny O’Connor, CEO of the Western Sydney Local Health District, have rejected claims of a lack of transparency. While Blacktown Hospital conceded that excessive waiting times were experienced at its emergency department in early January 2015, there has been no official data issued on one patient who allegedly had to wait as long as 40 hours. Paramedics argue that long delays were caused by the hospital’s temporary closing of 60 beds

CORPORATES
WESTERN SYDNEY HEALTH, NEW SOUTH WALES. MINISTRY OF HEALTH, BLACKTOWN HOSPITAL

Patients wait too long for life-saving care – report

Original article by Nicole Hasham
The Sydney Morning Herald – Page: 11 : 10-Dec-14

The Auditor-General’s office in New South Wales (NSW) has issued the latest survey of public hospital emergency department performance. It shows an improvement on 2013, despite a rise in patient numbers to close to 2.7 million. However waiting times at hospitals in the Sydney, Central Coast and Western NSW health districts were unacceptably long, as the facilities failed to meet the standard of four fifths of patients being treated within 10 minutes. Ambulance response times meanwhile have fallen to 10.8 minutes, in the biggest improvement since 2009

CORPORATES
NEW SOUTH WALES. AUDITOR GENERAL’S DEPT, NEW SOUTH WALES. MINISTRY OF HEALTH, GOSFORD HOSPITAL, ROYAL PRINCE ALFRED HOSPITAL, CONCORD HOSPITAL, CANTERBURY HOSPITAL, AMBULANCE SERVICE OF NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY

Phillip Hughes death: ‘Very rare, very freakish’ condition

Original article by Melanie Kembrey
The Age – Page: online : 28-Nov-14

Doctors have commented on the nature of the sports injury that led to the death of a cricket player in Sydney. Peter Brukner, the team doctor of the Australian national squad, said the incident in which a ball struck the neck of 25-year-old Phillip Hughes and split his vertebral artery was "incredibly rare". The victim suffered a subarachnoid haemorrhage and died in St Vincent’s Hospital despite having been resuscitated at the scene of the accident. Brukner said the hospital staff and the paramedics attending did a very good job under the circumstances

CORPORATES
ST VINCENT’S HOSPITAL SYDNEY LIMITED, SYDNEY CRICKET GROUND, CRICKET NEW SOUTH WALES, CRICKET AUSTRALIA