Factual. Independent. Impartial.
We supply news, images and multimedia to hundreds of news outlets every day
Health
Phoebe Loomes and Neve Brissenden

Thousands leaving NSW emergency units without treatment

A record 770,089 people presented at NSW emergency units in the first three months of 2023. (Dean Lewins/AAP PHOTOS)

Virtual healthcare is being touted as a solution to the growing health system crisis in NSW as new data reveals almost one in 12 people leave emergency departments without seeing a doctor or finishing treatment.

A record 770,089 people presented to emergency departments between January and March, but 63,282 left without being discharged amid long post-pandemic wait times, a Bureau of Health Information quarterly report shows.

Health Minister Ryan Park says the system is still recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, but virtual care is an option to take the pressure off emergency rooms and ambulance services.

"This report highlights systems still under enormous stress and still starting to emerge from the pressures of COVID," he said on Wednesday.

"We're focusing on rolling out the 25 urgent care centre services across NSW including some of our virtual care services designed specifically and virtually totally to take pressure off our emergency departments."

Opposition Leader Mark Speakman said using technology to improve health care was necessary.

"There's a lot to be said for using telehealth, particularly for patients in regional or remote areas who can't necessarily get to a hospital quickly," he said on Wednesday.

"The more we use technology and look at innovative ways to reduce hospital waiting times, the better."

The walkout figure is a slight improvement on the record numbers between April and June 2022, when more than 76,000 patients left emergency without completing their treatment.

But the figures remain above pre-COVID pandemic levels.

Almost 350,000 ambulance call-outs were made during the first three months of the year, the highest number since reporting began in 2010, with response times improving after getting worse last year.

Increasing demand for ambulances and emergency services began before the pandemic and showed no sign of slowing.

There were 10,868 of the highest-priority ambulance responses for patients with life-threatening conditions, up 16.1 per cent from the same time last year.

About two-thirds of the highest-priority cases were reached within 10 minutes, an improvement on last year.

Some 44 per cent of priority-one cases were reached by an ambulance within 15 minutes, up from a record low last year.

In general, ambulance patients were still waiting longer than before the pandemic, the report noted.

Mr Park said the government had plans to ease pressure on ambulance services.

"Essentially we look at what the calls are coming in, identify calls that we might be able to service in a different way, and triage those back so that they're not requiring an ambulance," he said.

A separate survey by the bureau last year found patients were overwhelmingly satisfied with the care being given by the state's paramedics despite increased call-out numbers.

President of the Australian Paramedics Association NSW Chris Kastelan said one in five ambulance patients arriving at hospital were still waiting too long to be transferred into care.

"These sobering numbers once again highlight that we desperately need action on the recommendations that came from the inquiry into ramping," he said.

A parliamentary inquiry made 12 recommendations in December, including that all hospitals experiencing bed block build dedicated weather-proof facilities away from the elements, and the government work to reduce hospital occupancy to 85 per cent.

The minister said he was focused on trying to provide multiple pathways for patients to better access health care within the entire NSW health system.

The report also highlights the sector's reliance on adequate staffing as health workers continue calling for a six per cent pay rise rather than the 4.5 per cent they were offered this week.

License this article

Sign up to read this article
Get your dose of factual, independent and impartial news
Already a member? Sign in here
Top stories on AAP right now