Shepparton’s nurses, doctors and paramedics rise to the challenge

Victoria’s hospitals and paramedics are rising to the challenge of record demand caused by a busy flu season, the latest performance data shows.

Across the state, ambulances recorded the best ever response for the quarter, despite responding to more than 8,500 extra Code 1 emergency patients than the same quarter a year earlier.

In the City of Greater Shepparton, ambulances arrived within an average of 10:14 minutes during the June 2019 quarter – an improvement compared with 11:16 for the same period 12 months prior.

The data shows 86.9 per cent of Greater Shepparton’s Code 1 ambulances arrived within 15 minutes – better than the 83.7 per cent a year prior. Ambulances are also turning out to more emergencies. In Greater Shepparton, ambulances responded to 998 Code 1 calls, up on the 985 call-outs in the June quarter 2018.

Across the state, hospital emergency departments saw nearly 32,000 extra patients compared with the same quarter in 2018.

Goulburn Valley Health treated 100 per cent of its Category 1 emergency patients immediately upon arrival at the hospital. The hospital also:

  • Reduced its elective surgery waiting lists to 534 patients – down from 588 a year earlier
  • Operated on more than half of Category 1 urgent elective surgery patients within 11 days – well under the 30-day benchmark
  • Treated more than half of all elective surgery patients within 22 days – 10 days faster than a year earlier
  • Completed the transfer of 82.5 per cent of patients who arrived at the hospital in an ambulance in the June 2019 quarter within the target of 40 minutes, up on its 73.6 per cent transfer rate a year earlier.

The busy flu season has put enormous strain on our nurses, doctors and paramedics. Already, there have been more than 40,000 laboratory-confirmed cases of influenza across the state, including 10,000 children and more than 70 deaths.

That’s why we’re backing our health services with a record $12.2 billion investment, including a record $2.5 billion in the Victorian Budget 2019/20.

The Victorian Government is stepping up its fight against the flu, making the flu vaccination compulsory for frontline staff in hospital wards.

The Government is working with health experts, unions and hospitals on new rules that ensure nurses, doctors and other staff are fully vaccinated against a host of diseases, including the flu.

High-risk areas such as Intensive Care Units, Neonatal Intensive Care Units and cancer wards will all become areas staff must be vaccinated. Workers who refuse to be vaccinated will be redeployed to other parts of the hospital.

Source: Vic Government