17 June 2024

ACT Budget: $52.7 million and extra capacity to boost elective surgery

| Ian Bushnell
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man and woman in operating theatre

Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith and Chief Minister Andrew Barr in one of the new operating theatres at Canberra Hospital. Photo: Ian Bushnell.

The ACT Government will commit $52.7 million from next week’s 2024-25 Budget to getting on top of the Territory’s elective surgery waiting list and meeting its target of 60,000 procedures in this term of government.

Chief Minister Andrew Barr said health would be the centrepiece of the Budget, with about $2.6 billion in funding for 2024-25. Working to make inroads into elective surgery was an important part of that.

He said opening the new Critical Services Building at Canberra Hospital in August, with its greater surgical capacity, would be pivotal.

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Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith said the ability to do more elective surgery would come from a combination of increased emergency capacity not bumping elective surgeries, more efficient theatres with their own MRI technology reducing surgery times, and paying for 300 eye cataract procedures in the private sector.

She said the funding would enable a seven-day-a-week surgical operation, including additional twilight and weekend emergency procedures.

Thirteen full-time equivalent theatres will be available in the new building when it opens, while one theatre will stay in the older section of the hospital for obstetric and gynecological work to be near the Women’s and Children’s Hospital.

“But there may be more than 13 physical theatres being used to deliver that capacity,” Ms Stephen-Smith said.

She said the integrated MRI theatre would mean certain types of procedures could happen more quickly because patients would not need to be moved from a theatre to the MRI back to the theatre.

“So it’s not only about the number of theatres that we have, but it’s also about ensuring that those theatres can best be used in the most efficient way so that our surgical teams can get on with the job of actually performing surgery and not having to wait while another surgery pushes out their elective or planned care,” Ms Stephen-Smith said.

She said Canberra Health Services was on track to meet its target of 15,500 elective surgeries this financial year, and the extra capacity would boost that target to 17,000 for 2024-25.

The other factor would be extra staff, including specialists.

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The overall health allocation includes funding for 800 more staff, but Ms Stephen-Smith said she would have more to say soon and during the election campaign, specifically about locum specialists and the continued recruitment of staff specialists.

“We are always continuing to recruit, and that will be a combination of staff specialists and visiting medical officers,” she said.

“The reality of the situation, not just in the ACT but across the country, is that we are experiencing shortages across many parts of our health workforce. That does mean that sometimes we need to have locum staff, we need to have agency staff, and we need to have those visiting medical officers as well as our really fantastic staff specialists.”

The Critical Services Building will eventually bring 22 theatres online.

The government says the Budget will also support acute care for older people across the public hospitals, inpatient rehabilitation at the University of Canberra Hospital, services for critically ill newborns and expanded maternity services.

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davidmaywald9:34 am 18 Jun 24

Is this a news article, or a Labor press release? I’m confused. Perhaps there should be a disclaimer at the top of this story…

I am one of those Canberra residents awaiting surgery and am very welcoming of this announcement davidmaywald! What have the Canberra Liberals got to offer? I certainly don’t have any confidence in Leanne Castley as Health Minister but the party has little to choose from. The last time they were in government and in one of our city’s darkest days they blew one of our public hospitals up leaving only two public hospitals.

I have been watching the ongoing expansion of our city’s health system and its two major hospitals with interest. Just four months out from the ACT election we are still waiting on the Canberra Liberals to get off their lazy backsides and release their health policies. The party has been hinting at getting rid of the nurse walk in centres for years and have been whingeing about the government’s acquisition of the Catholic owned and publicly funded Calvary Hospital since it was acquired last year. So just what do the Canberra Liberals have to offer?

Hopefully the party’s health policies are a bit better researched than their dud bus only public transport proposal. They have been complaining about the light rail network for over four elections now and the best they can give us is a bus transport mode that can’t even make it over Commonwealth Avenue bridge and on to Woden! Funny man Mark Parton has gone into hiding!

@Jack D
Shouldn’t your election ad have authotisation, Jack D?

Gregg Heldon9:01 am 19 Jun 24

Jack, Mark Parton has been quiet because, no doubt, he’s preparing for the CEO Sleepout. Just like he does every year.
You should join him and discuss what you’d do for homeless people if your lot got elected. Oh that’s right! They were elected four years ago and have done sweet FA.

I have done quite a bit for the homeless Gregg Heldon, not just for one night of the year but throughout a number of years. This includes going out and searching for those who have just disappeared, helping those with addictions and other mental illnesses, making sure they are warm and fed and everything else to help those living in such miserable circumstances.
Homelessness is not isolated to Canberra alone but all over Australia!!

Waiting lists for Category 1 reviews – those that need to be seen within 30 days – are around 12 months for some services. This could hardly be considered ‘elective’ surgery. What does this government actually propose to do to manage preventable morbidity and mortality from mismanaging the health budget?

Coulda done this several years ago.

Gee, I wonder why they are splashing all this cash around now…

Some of it has to do with the capacity of the theatres – the new building is a critical aspect. There was no point in splashing the money sooner if there wasn’t a theatre available.

Did you read the article? They specifically mention they need the extra capacity of the hospital expansion that opens this year.

Ah, yes, the worst health system in the country couldn’t have used this money much sooner in many other areas.

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