Canberra Liberals MLA Leanne Castley, Shadow Minister for Health, will today call on Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith to provide up to date figures for Emergency Department and Outpatient wait times following the release of two โscathingโ documents over the Assembly break.
The Productivity Commissions Report on Government Services found that only 48 per cent of patients were seen within clinically recommended timeframes in the ACT, while the national average was 67 per cent.ย
FOI documents showed that more than 23,000 patients were overdue for their outpatient appointment in March 2022.
- ACT has longest ED waiting times in country: ROGS (6 February)
- Liberals concerned by long outpatient wait times (20 January)
Ms Castley said it was outrageous that Canberrans were forced to wait some of the longest times in the country to access crucial public health services.
โThe data shows that patients who are triaged as category one patients, who should be seen within 30 days, are waiting an average of 152 days,โ Ms Castley said.
Canberra Health Services also confirmed that there was no specific target to reduce the percentage of patients who were overdue for their outpatient appointment, Ms Castley remarked.
โThe brief to the Minister confirmed that reducing outpatient waiting times was not a priority in 2021/22,โ Ms Castley said.
โThe Health Minister canโt provide up to date figures for outpatient appointment and ED wait times because of more bungling with implementation of the Digital Health Record.
โIt is unacceptable that the Minister canโt provide outpatient wait times because the data has to be pulled manually through the new $145 million Digital Health Record system.โ
Ms Stephen-Smith also confirmed that real-time ED wait times are not being displayed on Canberra Health Servicesโ website following introduction of its Digital Health Record, Ms Castley remarked.
โCanberrans are in the dark about which emergency department has the shortest wait times to get the treatment they need,โ Ms Castley said.
โMy motion calls on the government to be accountable and prioritise outpatients, some of which have been waiting years to receive their appointment.
โThe Barr-Rattenbury government have failed to meet their own emergency department and elective surgery targets each year for this term of government.
โUnfortunately, Canberrans who need these services are facing the consequences of th Governmentโs failures,” Ms Castley concluded.