Patients Spent Average of Four Hours, Seven Minutes in U.S. Emergency Departments in 2009, According to New Report From Press Ganey

Patients Spent Average of Four Hours, Seven Minutes in U.S. Emergency Departments in 2009, According to New Report From Press Ganey
Despite Rise in Wait Times, Patient Satisfaction Remains the Same

PR Newswire

SOUTH BEND, Ind., July 22

SOUTH BEND, Ind., July 22 /PRNewswire/ — Patients at U.S. hospitals are experiencing the longest wait times in emergency departments since reports were first made available in 2002, according to Press Ganey Associates, Inc., the health care industry’s leading provider of quality improvement solutions.

From the moment patients walk into a hospital emergency room until the time they are discharged from the emergency department, the average time spent was four hours and seven minutes in 2009 – an increase of four minutes compared to 2008 and 31 minutes more than the nationwide average in 2002.

The data, included in Press Ganey’s 2010 Emergency Department Pulse Report: Patient Perspectives on American Health Care, is based on evaluations of more than 1.5 million patients treated at 1,893 hospitals in 2009.

In terms of wait time, Utah had the worst performance, with a staggering average emergency department time spent of eight hours and 17 minutes — nearly an hour and a half longer than the state’s average time spent last year.

Iowa had the shortest average time spent at just under three hours (2:55), followed by South Dakota (2:59), North Dakota (3:07), Nebraska (3:08) and Minnesota (3:11). The full list of state by state average wait times is available at www.ImproveMyER.com.

Despite longer wait times, patient satisfaction with U.S. hospital emergency departments stayed about the same in 2009, following a five-year upward trend. More than half the states were able to improve wait times or keep increases to a minimum.

Nevada made the biggest improvement in 2009, reducing average wait time by 66 minutes since 2008.

“Although the overall national average wait time increased slightly, what we found encouraging is that 32 states had either reduced wait times or held increases in wait times to five minutes or less over the previous year,” said Deirdre Mylod, vice president, hospital services, Press Ganey. “Some states have done really well in keeping emergency department times in check, despite growing challenges of higher patient volumes and understaffing. But there’s still a long way to go to make visits to the emergency department much more efficient for patients.”

Communication is Key

The Press Ganey report found that communication is imperative in providing patients with satisfactory emergency department experiences. Patients are willing to wait for care as long as they are kept informed about wait times. Patients who waited more than four hours, but received “good” or “very good” information about delays were just as satisfied as patients who spent less than one hour in the emergency department.

In fact, patient evaluation of communication about delays is identified as a key driver nationally of satisfaction.

“Patients would, of course, prefer a more efficient process,” said Mylod. “But good communication helps them understand the processes within the emergency department environment and shows them that staff has not forgotten them. Frequent, proactive communication improves both the quality of patient care and the manner in which patients perceive their care.”

Many hospitals are instituting procedures such as whiteboards in exam rooms to keep patients informed about treatments or delays. Also, welcome letters or pamphlets provided by the hospital help patients understand the process of triage, treatment, etc.

Press Ganey has developed a sample list of what patients can expect in emergency departments at www.ImproveMyER.com.

Patient Flow

Improving patient flow is another way to keep patients moving efficiently through the system. A long wait time might not be indicative of the emergency department’s performance. Instead, it could be a symptom of a larger hospital-wide issue that keeps the patients in the emergency department when inpatient beds or testing equipment is not readily available.

Arrival Times

Another factor impacting patient satisfaction with emergency departments is the time of day patients arrive. According to the report, patients who arrive between 7 a.m. and 3 p.m. evaluate their care much more favorably than those who arrive after 3 p.m.

Patients who arrive in the emergency department on Monday and Tuesday rank lowest in terms of patient satisfaction, while Saturday and Sunday evaluations of care are the highest.

Top 10 Metro Areas for Highest Emergency Department Satisfaction

After reviewing more than 1.5 million patient evaluations, Press Ganey ranked the following metro areas as the top 10 in terms of patient satisfaction for emergency department care:

1. Madison, Wis.

2. Grand Rapids, Mich.

3. Hartford, Conn.

- Indianapolis, Ind.

- New Orleans, La.

6. Miami-Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

- Milwaukee, Wis.

8. Toledo, Ohio

9. Allentown-Bethlehem, Pa.

10. Albany, N.Y.

This is the third straight year that the Miami-Ft. Lauderdale metro area appeared on the list.

The findings and observations of the Emergency Department Pulse Report highlight progress being made in hospitals, emphasize areas for improvement, and explore the path to improving the quality of health care in the United States. Press Ganey works with emergency department administrators to assist them with best practices such as implementation of “fast tracks” or hiring dedicated staff charged with improving communication about delays in the emergency department. Other strategies for improving emergency department patient satisfaction include:

* Analyze and interpret patients’ perception of care
* Identify priorities for improvement specific to each institution
* Recommend specific best practices
* Facilitate change management within the hospital including accountability and reward and recognition
* Improve clinical and operational processes to improve flow and reduce waiting time

“Improving patient satisfaction is not just about making patients happy; it is about improving the patient experience for the overall good of healthcare,” said Rick Siegrist, CEO of Press Ganey. “Satisfied patients are more likely to disclose information and follow treatment plans. They also are more likely to seek care when they need it, avoiding larger health issues in the future. The information from this report helps us work with hospital administrators, doctors and nurses to ensure that patient voices are heard and the right improvements are made to provide the proper emergency care everyone deserves.”

Press Ganey Associates, Inc.

For 25 years, Press Ganey has been committed to providing insight that allows health care organizations to improve the quality of care they provide while improving their bottom-line results. The company offers the largest comparative customer feedback databases, actionable data, solution resources and unparalleled consulting and customer service. Press Ganey currently partners with more than 10,000 health care facilities — including over 40% of U.S. hospitals — to measure and improve the quality of their care. For more information visit www.pressganey.com.

SOURCE Press Ganey

18 killed in Colombia rains

Bogota, May 26 (IANS) Heavy rains in Colombia have left at least 18 people dead and some 84,200 affected in the past weekend, the National Emergency System said.

The downpour caused floodings, landslides and storms in 134 municipalities, Xinhua reported.

According to the emergency department, 87 people were injured, five missing and more than 15,000 house were damaged.

More heavy rains are expected to hit the central and south of the country, accompanied by thunder storms.

Hospitals unhappy with budget snub

North-west Victorian hospitals say they are disappointed what they say were modest requests for upgrading work were ignored in the state budget.

The focus of the regional health budget was on Bendigo, which is getting a new $450 million hospital.

But there was none of the new money requested for improvement work at Mildura, Swan Hill, Edenhope and Warracknabeal.

The Mildura Base Hospital chief executive, Dane Huxley, says he asked for less than $5 million.

“There’s been no infrastructure development at this hospital since it opened in 2000, so that’s really 10 years with nothing happening at all and we felt that we had a very good case for modest enhancements to the building in the emergency department, the maternity unit and the mental health unit,” he said.

Health talks go down to the wire

The future of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s plan to overhaul the country’s health system remains uncertain today as he prepares to face resistant state leaders at the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) meeting in Canberra.

State and territory leaders met last night to hammer out a position on the deal before dining with Mr Rudd at the Lodge.

They will also meet again this morning for last-minute talks before heading into the meeting with the Prime Minister, where it is understood they will also push for more money for mental health and emergency services.

The Federal Government wants to take back a third of GST revenue from the states to directly fund 60 per cent of hospital costs.

It has put $3 billion on the table to spend across a range of areas including emergency departments and elective surgery if the states agree to the deal.

But New South Wales and Victoria are refusing to surrender their GST share and also want state and Commonwealth funds put into a joint pool for distribution.

NSW Premier Kristina Keneally last night chaired the meeting of premiers and chief ministers.

Speaking after the meeting she said there was hope a deal would be struck, with officials working through the night on the details.

“We’re 90 per cent of the way there,” she said.

“There’s a way forward and I’m quite hopeful for tomorrow.”

Victorian Premier John Brumby has been highly critical of Mr Rudd’s proposal and is instead pushing for a 50-50 funding split.

“I’d like to see a plan which delivers the best hospital system in the world,” he said.

“I think it’s really important that what everybody does is work for the best possible deal.”

South Australian Premier Mike Rann, who has clashed with Mr Brumby over his position, is backing Mr Rudd and is urging his state counterparts to “crack a deal”.

“When someone goes into a hospital, when they go into an emergency department, they don’t look around and say that bit of equipment is paid by the Commonwealth and that bit is paid for by the state,” he said.

“When it comes right down to it you’ve got a Prime Minister who is prepared to negotiate, yet we’ve got some premiers who are saying things are non-negotiable.

“The message is to whoever it is who is recalcitrant is put patients first rather than egos.”

The Northern Territory, Queensland, Tasmania and the ACT have indicated they support the majority of the plan.

Yesterday Health Minister Nicola Roxon said the Government was still considering recalling Parliament to push through legislation for a referendum if negotiations collapsed.

“We could do it in the Budget sessions. We’ve made those preparations, but we believe – and really have been putting all of our energy and effort, and not insubstantial energy and effort – into the negotiations for tomorrow and that’s our top priority,” she said.

She also indicated that the Government could be in favour of a pooled funding arrangement after the states indicated they would ensure that 30 per cent of their GST funds would be allocated to health.

“I think it is a positive step. We’re prepared to talk more with the states and territories as we have been doing, but the time is getting pretty tight,” she said.

“We don’t want some mock pool that’s set up which really just allows the states to do things through their state treasuries exactly the way they have done before.”

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says he doubts the meeting will get a result.

“I think what we will get tomorrow is an agreement to talk, not agreement to change,” he said.

No huff and puff: Rann defends health negotiations

South Australian Premier Mike Rann has taken a swipe at other states over the Federal Government’s proposed hospital funding plan.

Victoria has criticised the Commonwealth’s latest promise under the plan of $739 million for aged care services.

The New South Wales Premier is also hesitant about accepting the overall proposal.

Mr Rann says, instead of public grandstanding, he has been negotiating behind the scenes and supports the deal in principle.

“What we’ve seen is a bit of huffing and puffing and it’s all about who’s running which empire what we want is the best deal for hospitals, the best deals for patients ultimately involves more money,” he said.

“So what I’ve been negotiating for is an emergency department guarantee, extra money for primary health care and money for aged care.”

Nurses campaign for more staff

Nurses in Coffs Harbour on the New South Wales mid north coast have today started a campaign for more staff at the Base hospital’s Emergency Department (ED).

The Nurses Association says its members are reaching breaking point because of the heavy workloads and low staffing levels.

The union says a key concern is management’s failure to meet a mandated nurse-to-patient ratio in the ED.

One senior nurse who does not want to be named says it is hard to believe conditions in the Emergency Department

“Waiting times in the waiting room are getting longer and longer and the mental health problems that should be on the wards are actually being locked in little consult rooms with a security guard,” she said.

“That’s not appropriate safe care for anybody, it’s not safe on the staff [and] it’s not safe on the patients.”

‘Unveil entire health plan’, Gallagher urges Rudd

ACT Health Minister Katy Gallagher says it would be helpful if the Commonwealth unveiled its entire health plan.

The Federal Government has promised to spend $740 million taking over aged care services if the states and territories agree to sign up to its health plan.

The proposal is the latest in a series of announcements in the lead-up to next week’s Council of Australian Governments (COAG) meeting.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd yesterday announced the plan includes $500 million to cut emergency department waiting times to under four hours.

The Government wants to claw back a third of GST revenue from the states to pay for a 60 per cent funding takeover of public hospitals.

Ms Gallagher says some of the proposals will help the ACT but she has reservations about others.

“What would be useful I think would be to have the whole package pulled together,” she said.

“We’re getting drips of what the Commonwealth’s intending to do day by day so it is a bit hard to put it all together.

“Some of the announcements [Kevin Rudd] has made will I think assist the ACT in meeting our health needs. This emergency department one I’m not so sure.”

Ms Gallagher says she still supports the overall health plan in principle but says it is hard to know whether other jurisdictions will back the idea.

“I think there are jurisdictions which are really very concerned about a number of areas. We have less of those concerns because of our size,” she said.

Bligh demands more detail about health plan

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says she wants more detail this week about Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s health and hospitals plan.

The Federal Government has offered the states $500 million for emergency department waiting times if they sign the agreement.

Ms Bligh says that is a good down payment but she would like more information about the overall plan before state and territory leaders meet next week.

“We’ll be burning some midnight oil between now and COAG [Council of Australian Governments],” she said.

“We don’t believe that being given complex details on the day is a reasonable way to secure agreement to such comprehensive reform.

“I look forward to more details over the next seven or eight days but I’ll be going to Canberra next week looking for a deal for Queensland.

“But I want it to be a good deal and the right deal for a state like ours.”

She says she welcomes any new funds into the health system.

“I’m very pleased the Prime Minister has identified emergency departments as a priority,” she said.

“We are going to COAG and what I’ll be looking for is further commitment from the Prime Minister in other key areas, particularly aged care and primary health.

“If we’re going to sign up a deal for Queenslanders, I want it to be the right deal and this is a good down payment.”

AMAQ concern

The Australian Medical Association of Queensland (AMAQ) says a shortage of hospital beds is the biggest challenge to cutting emergency department waiting times.

AMAQ president Dr Mason Stevenson has welcomed the extra funding but says it will not be enough to provide the extra beds that are needed.

“AMA Queensland have worked out very recently that we need at least 450 additional beds right now in order to get our hospital occupancy rates down to 85 per cent,” he said.

“Only then will we truly be able to solve our emergency department woes.”

He says part of the funding depends on whether hospitals meet waiting time targets.

Dr Stevenson says the incentive system has worked well in the United Kingdom.

“This has been a system in place now for many years and they have successfully reached those targets so that 99 per cent, or 98 per cent of patients visiting an emergency department in the UK now enjoy waits of no more than four hours,” he said.

Rural services

Meanwhile, western Queensland MP Bruce Scott says the Federal Government’s health plan needs to ensure funding gets to small, rural health services.

Mr Scott, the Liberal National Party Member for Maranoa, is in the state’s central-west this week talking with residents about health services.

He says attracting doctors to rural communities is still a problem and using local hospital boards to determine funding priorities would help.

“I think if you leave those decisions and have got funding at a local level, I’m sure you’d have a much better chance of attracting doctors,” he said.

“Now that hasn’t happened in this term of the Federal Government.

“If we had the money going direct to local communities, they’d spend every dollar on health, whereas so much is hived off on the way through.”

Hopes for new Blayney doctor

There has been a major breakthrough for the Blayney community because a doctor from Moree has applied to work at the local hospital.

The town has been without an on-call doctor at its emergency department for six weeks after the Visiting Medical Officer (VMO) did not renew his contract.

The emergency department has been operating with triage nurses and camera phone hook-ups to specialists in Bathurst and Orange.

Dr John Shepherd of Moree has now announced he will apply for VMO rights following a visit to Blayney and an inspection of the hospital.

The Chairwoman of the Blayney Health Council, Audrey Hardman, says it is great news for the community.

“We are certainly looking [forward] to having the opportunity to keep the accident and emergency department open,” she said.

“The main thing is having a doctor working through emergency, we can also access the acute beds for the general public.”

Ms Hardman says Dr Shepherd is an extremely experienced GP.

“He’s also a surgeon and he’s also a gynaecologist, so we’d have a man of great skills and talent and I know the staff morale has lifted 1,000 per cent knowing that we’ve got – we hope – we’ve got the problem solved.”

The Greater Western Area Health Service says it is aware the doctor has commenced talks with the Health Council and will be pleased to receive an application for VMO rights at Blayney.

NSW Govt urged to back health shake-up

A New South Wales mid-north coast federal MP is urging the State Government to support the national heath and hospitals reform plan.

The appeal was made to NSW Health Minister Carmel Tebutt in Port Macquarie yesterday.

The Minister was opening an expansion of the base hospital’s emergency department.

Independent Lyne MP Rob Oakeshott met Ms Tebbutt and told her that the proposed structural and financial reforms were good for the mid-north coast.

“For a growing regional area this structural and financial reform on the table to date works for us and will address many of the issues that confront us,” he said.

“We do have a bed shortage and we’re not going anywhere fast until we address that.

“So in the short-term if we can get more beds we’ll maximise what is being proposed at a federal level.”

Mr Oakeshott asked for the state to make short-term capital investments in extra hospital beds.

“The slight expansion of the emergency department it is yet another step along the way to getting significant increases in bed numbers,” he said.

“But we all want the structural and financial reform that’s happening at the moment in the Commonweath/state debate to really be maximised on the ground.”

Foundation best placed to offer eye clinic: Snowdon

The Federal Government has defended a decision to rely on a charity to provide millions of dollars to set up an eye health clinic in Alice Springs.

The Fred Hollows Foundation has pledged $3 million to construct the clinic in the Alice Springs Hospital.

The Minister for Indigenous Health, Warren Snowdon, says the foundation is best placed to provide the service.

“We’ve got to have involved, interested partners who engage in improving not only the primary healthcare of Aboriginal communities,” he said.

The clinic would provide services for all people in central Australia and will target Indigenous communities where cataracts cause more than 30 per cent of blindness.

Mr Snowdon says the emergency department (ED) must be relocated before the eye clinic can be built.

“The hospital has got to manage all its patients and … the demand is certainly here for us to have a dedicated eye clinic,” he said.

“The money is now going to be made available for a dedicated eye clinic, it will be developed in conjunction with and as a result of directly the investment of the funds to build the new emergency department.”

The hospital’s general manager Vicki Taylor says it is estimated that the new emergency department will take about 18 months to complete.

“What we’re planning is that the ED will start around about October and that’s around 18 months and at the same time we’ll start planning the day procedure unit and the stand-alone eye clinic. Those sorts of facilities I think are very good for any opthamologist who’s seeking an experience outside capital cities,” she said.

Health service denies nurse shortage

Echuca Regional Health is denying union allegations that it is not meeting nurse-to-patient ratios in its emergency department.

The Australian Nursing Federation says the hospital does not have enough staff for the number of cubicles it uses to treat patients.

But the hospital’s executive director of nursing, June Dyson, denies the department is short-staffed.

“We don’t believe that’s the case,” she said.

“We continually review our staffing in the emergency department with our staff, and in fact we’re meeting next week to review what’s happened over the Easter period and whether the staffing we have is sufficient.”

Emergency dept doctor search continues

The Blayney Health Council is meeting doctors today who may be able to fill the empty on-call position at the town’s emergency department.

More than 100 people attended a meeting in Blayney last night to voice concerns over being left without a doctor with emergency visiting rights for the past month.

Health council chairwoman Audrey Hardman says it will meet two doctors today who may be able to alleviate the situation.

“A doctor from Carcoar, she’s very anxious to help but of course the big problem is she also has surgeries in Bathurst at Kelso and the night surgery is the problem,” she said.

“The only problem we have is the fact that we don’t have a doctor there which is obviously from the community point of view very concerning, and we will pursue that line – we are working very hard to try and ensure that we will have a doctor to cover that section.”

Patient demands more emergency dept doctors

There are claims the Warragul Hospital’s emergency department needs more than one GP at night-time, after a woman who was twice sent home later found she had gangrenous bladder stones.

Newborough woman Yasmin Plichta says she was sent home from the hospital twice last month, despite having excruciating pain in her stomach and high blood pressure.

She says a surgeon later found her bladder stones had turned gangrenous and said it could have turned into the potentially deadly disease septicaemia.

Ms Plichta says an ultrasound would have detected the gangrene.

“I focus on the emergency department, there’s one GP taking care of the entire Baw Baw Shire externally and internally doing the hospital rounds that is humanly impossible,” she said.

The West Gippsland Healthcare Group’s CEO, Ormond Pearson, says the Warragul Hospital cannot afford more than one doctor in the emergency department at night.

“There’s no doubt that we would like to have more senior medical officers available in our emergency department 24-hours-a-day but we are a public health service and we have funding issues and if the Government was able to fund more senior staff to be available in our emergency department we’d be absolutely delighted,” he said.

Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Rahway (NJ) Selects Emergency Medical Associates (EMA) to Staff Emergency Department

RAHWAY, N.J.–(Business Wire)–
Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Rahway (RWJ Rahway), a member of the
Robert Wood Johnson Health System, has announced the selection of Emergency
Medical Associates (EMA), one of the country`s premier emergency physician
groups, to staff its Emergency Department. EMA (www.ema-ed.com) began staffing
the Emergency Department on April 1, 2010.

“We selected Emergency Medical Associates because of their reputation for high
quality patient care, extensive history of improving patient satisfaction and
cutting-edge approach to reducing ED wait times and improving ED operations,”
said Kirk C. Tice, President & CEO, RWJ Rahway.

“The Emergency Department is the front door to the hospital and for many
patients their first experience with a hospital is through the ED. We are
excited and confident that we made the right decision in selecting EMA to staff
our Emergency Department with board certified and board eligible emergency
physicians. We are also pleased to announce that Michael Bernstein, MD, MBA, has
been selected as Chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine,” continued Mr.
Tice.

In EMA-staffed hospital emergency departments, they have been able to achieve
patient satisfaction rankings greater than the 90th percentile, as measured by a
national patient satisfaction survey. EMA providers saw close to one million
patients at EMA-staffed client hospital emergency departments in 2009.

EMA, headquartered in New Jersey, has more than 32 years of experience in
emergency department staffing and operations, with extensive expertise in adult
and pediatric emergency medicine, emergency medical services (EMS), emergency
department operations, physician-nurse collaboration, clinical information
systems and academic research. EMA physicians chair three emergency medicine
Fellowships in the areas of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Emergency Medicine
Ultrasound and an EMS Physician Fellowship (EMAMD1), which trains emergency
physicians to be physician directors of hospital-based EMS programs. EMA
physicians are involved in all major emergency medicine professional societies,
many of whom are either board members or active in key committees. For
additional information on Emergency Medical Associates (EMA), please go to
www.ema-ed.com.

Founded in 1917, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital at Rahway is a 267-bed
acute care facility serving primarily Union and Middlesex counties. Specialized
services include The Nicholas Quadrel Healthy Heart Center for cardiopulmonary
rehabilitation, the Wound Care Center, the Joint Replacement Center, and Care
Connection, a long-term care unit (Kindred Hospital Rahway). The hospital is a
member of the Robert Wood Johnson Health System and Network.

For additional information on RWJ Rahway, please visit www.rwjuhr.com.

Emergency Medical Associates
Contact Name: Scott Serbin
Title: Public Relations Coordinator
Phone: (973) 251-1075
Email: serbins@alpha-apr.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

$500K to target aged care revamp

The Queensland Government will spend nearly $500,000 to refurbish Cherbourg Hospital’s aged care facilities in the state’s south-east.

The emergency department will be redesigned to include one acute cubicle, one general cubicle and one assessment room to make it more accessible to older people.

A spokeswoman says the work should be completed by June.

Hospital defends upgrade delays

The design of the new emergency department at the Alice Springs Hospital is still being finalised eight months after the initial plans went on display.

The $22 million project is expected to almost double the existing number of treatment cubicles and provide a new home for the radiology department.

The hospital’s general manager, Vicki Taylor, says there have been delays in the project.

“It is a very, very complex structure and a lot of it is around models of care and the type of patients that you see,” she said.

“We want to do it right, so we’ve been doing a lot of consultation with our staff trying to make sure that it links in quite well with the other services in the hospital.

“We’re also planning to have some public meetings.”

Jammu and Kashmir Government launches disaster awareness drive

Srinagar, Mar 17 (ANI): The Jammu and Kashmir Government”s Disaster Management Cell has launched an awareness drive on various types of natural disasters in association with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

Fire and emergency department officials participated in a mock drill along with health officials.

The drill was organized in a hotel located on a busy road and is part of a weeklong drive to raise awareness levels about natural disasters.

Officials were shown how to handle a disaster situation.

UNDP Coordinator Aamir Ali said, “Our aim of conducting this mock drill was that if a natural disaster especially an earthquake hits the valley then we want to see how good is our response and how fast is the response.”

Civil Defence personnel Altaf Hussian said that they wanted to use this training for help to as many people as possible.

“We have been specially trained so that we can help the people in need. Since Kashmir valley falls in zone-5 and is earthquake prone, an earthquake can hit the city any time. We want to help as many people as possible,” said Hussian.

Srinagar and its adjoining areas fall in Seismic Zone V. The area is thus vulnerable to earthquakes and major disasters. (ANI)

Liberal RAH rebuild costed too low: AMA

The Australian Medical Association (AMA) says the Liberal Party’s estimated cost of $700 million to rebuild the Royal Adelaide Hospital is too low.

The AMA says the Opposition must revert to an alternative $1.4 billion option to refit the hospital if it wins Saturday’s South Australian election.

AMA president Andrew Lavender says, as well as bed replacement, core sections of the hospital need rebuilding, including the emergency and intensive care units.

He says that cannot be done for $700 million.

“We do need a world-class trauma centre and while we don’t expect that facilities need to be available in the next six years or so, there certainly has to be a planned, staged redevelopment of the Royal Adelaide Hospital,” he said.

“I think it’s a bit disingenuous to just talk about building the beds when we know we need the rest of the hospital also needs to be rebuilt.”

A spokesman for the Liberal Party says it is not surprising the peak medical body would be pushing for more money.

QEH money

Labor has pledged $125 million toward more refurbishing work at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, if it is returned to office.

There would be a new three-storey building to accommodate an emergency department, an outpatients area and nine operating theatres.

Yeppoon Hospital officially opens

The Premier has officially opened Yeppoon’s new 26-million dollar hospital.

The new facility has been taking patients since last month, and has an expanded emergency department and 22 in-patient beds.

Anna Bligh says Yeppoon now has one of the best hospitals for a town of its size and it allows for future growth.

“It has almost four times the number of emergency beds of the previous hospital, it has 22 inpatient beds, double the number of dental chairs,” she said.

“But it has extra room for further wings to be added in the future, as we see population grow in this very beautiful part of Queensland.

“It became operational on the 8th of February, just over five weeks ago.

“It has had 1047 patients through the emergency already and 124 patients have been admitted, and we’ve had more than 16-hundred outpatients sessions.

“So this community is using this service very well already and I think you can see how needed it was.”

Ms Bligh says the government is still negotiating with the Rockhampton Regional Council about funding for transforming the old hospital site on the Esplanade.

“We’re currently in discussions with the Rockhampton Regional Council to working through a process of demolition of the old hospital and then what exactly that open space would like like,” she said.

“I understand there are some discussions about a pool, that is the sort of thing that I’d certainly be interested in seeing a proposition put forward.

“This is something that we will work through systematically with the council.”