HotShot
-_-
Although this article is more specific to NSW's health system, I think its fair to say that other state's health system are in a similar situation.
Northern Sydney hospital system 'wretched': Abbott
September 28, 2007 - 8:52AM
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Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott has described Sydney's northern area hospital system as "wretched", saying it is so highly bureaucratised that no one can make a decision.
Mr Abbott's comment comes three days after a Sydney woman miscarried in a toilet after waiting two hours to be seen at Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney's north.
The NSW government is under increasing pressure to expand the terms of reference of an inquiry into the incident, after staff and experts yesterday came forward with their concerns about the hospital in the wake of Jana Horska's ordeal.
Mr Abbott said the federal government had increased health spending from 15 per cent to 22 per cent of the federal budget since 1996.
"The problem is that in the (Sydney Northern Area Health) hospital system, no one is in charge," Mr Abbott told the Nine Network this morning.
"I know Royal North Shore Hospital, I know Sydney Northern Area Health system.
"The problem is, no one in that wretched system can make a decision.
"That is a problem of a highly bureaucratised, highly politicised hospital management structure that's been put in place, I have to say, by the state Labor government.
He said he accepted the opposition would say the federal government was blaming the state of NSW.
"My oath I'm blaming the state Labor government," he said.
"They have let people down, comprehensively."
AAP
"No matter what government runs a hospital, no matter what funding arrangements you have, what adequacy of resources there is, there can be administrative mistakes and, in the end, human error occurs," he said. Rudd
http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/abbott-needs-a-nudge-rudd/2007/09/27/1190486482401.html
There are many, many articles on this.Doctors looked for foetus in bin
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Kate Benson Medical Reporter
September 28, 2007
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CECILLE HEATH, of Naremburn, was told to use toilet paper from the men's toilets to soak up the blood when she had a miscarriage in the waiting room of the emergency department at Royal North Shore Hospital in 2000. As the bleeding increased, Ms Heath, who was nine weeks' pregnant, said she went to the women's toilets but found no toilet paper. She went back to the nurse to ask for tissues, but was ignored.
"I was so distressed that they would not acknowledge me. I had to raise my voice, explaining that I thought I was miscarrying, but I was told to go away because they were busy. She would not even look at me."
Ms Heath, 48, said her husband then approached the nurse and was told "there is plenty [of toilet paper] in the men's. Go in there".
Ms Heath said when she was seen by a doctor five hours later she was told that part of the foetus or placenta was still in her cervix. Doctors then dug through a bin next to her looking for the bloodied tissues she had used to find the rest of the foetus.
"I couldn't believe it. I felt absolutely sick that they were doing that in front of me. That was my baby. No one even warned me about what they might find in the bin," she said.
"It was highly distressing and heartbreaking."
When Julie Prentice read yesterday's Herald, she was saddened to see that nothing had changed at Royal North Shore's emergency department since her experience there 19 years ago when she lost her baby in a toilet bowl and was wrongly accused by staff of having had a botched abortion.
"After it happens you are just grieving for the lost baby, but you do walk away thinking, 'Did I just catch them on a bad day?'," she said. "After reading the stories about these other women, perhaps it has always been like that."