Babies are booming in Emerald

Published Monday, 16 February, 2009 at 03:47 PM

Minister for Health
The Honourable Stephen Robertson

Emerald Hospital has recorded a baby boom - 90 births in the December quarter, up 57.9 per cent on the 57 babies delivered in the same period the previous year.

This figure is revealed in the December 2008 Quarterly Public Hospitals Performance Report.

Health Minister Stephen Robertson said increased activity at the hospital demonstrated the impact of the additional $10 billion Health Action Plan funding which is expanding the capacity of our public hospitals throughout Queensland.

The report released today shows the 4,106 people attending the emergency department is 12.3 per cent more than the 3,657 in the same quarter the previous year.

Emerald Hospital’s busy emergency department treats an average of 44 people a day.

At the same time, elective surgical waiting lists have been reduced, with 63 patients admitted, up 37 per cent on the 46 who were admitted from the waiting list in the same period in the previous year.

In the December quarter, the hospital admitted 718 people compared with 570 for the same period in the previous year. This is an increase of 26 per cent.

Mr Robertson said today that the rising number of births in Emerald reflected the young population of the town.

“This is one of the issues which will be addressed by the district’s health service planning which is currently under way to investigate population trends to help us plan our resource allocation to provide the best possible public health service to the community.”

In the three months to December 31, 2008, compared to the same quarter in 2007, Queensland hospitals provided:

• A 3.2 per cent increase (or 11,744 more patients) in the number of people treated in emergency departments

• A 5.9 per cent increase (or 12,284 more patients) in the number of people admitted to hospital

• An 8.4 per cent increase (or 8,520 more patients) in the number of people admitted for same day care in a hospital

• A 3.6 per cent increase (or 3,764 more patients) in the number of people admitted for more than one day

• A 0.4 per cent increase (or 3,074 more appointments) in the number of outpatient services provided

• A 6.8 per cent increase (or 1,950 more patients) in the number of people receiving elective surgery, and

• A 4.8 per cent increase (or 482 more babies) in the number of babies born

Mr Robertson said staffing continued to grow strongly. Since 2005 Queensland Health has employed:

  • 1,715 more doctors, a 38 per cent increase to 6,267
  • 5,778 more nurses, a 26 per cent to 27,689, and
  • 2,134 more health practitioners, professional and technical staff, up 31 per cent to 9,068.

Mr Robertson said the quarterly performance report reflected the hard work and commitment of the dedicated Queensland Health staff across the state, and he commended their efforts in providing quality health care to people in their communities.

The Queensland Public Hospitals Performance Report December Quarter 2008 is available on Queensland Health’s website at www.health.qld.gov.au

Definitions:

Outpatient services provided = the number of outpatient and other non-admitted services minus services such as emergency, pharmacy, pathology, diagnostic imaging, community health services, district nursing services and other outreach services.

People treated as inpatients or emergencies = the number of admitted patient episodes plus the number of emergency services not resulting in admission. For example, some people will attend the Emergency Department and then be admitted to hospital. These people will only be counted once as inpatients and not counted as emergency patients for this particular figure.

People admitted to hospital = the number of admitted patient episodes of care. For example, one person might be admitted to hospital on two separate occasions, they would then be counted as two episodes of care.

People treated in emergency departments = the number of accident and emergency services provided. For example, a patient attends emergency three times, then it is counted as three separate attendances to the emergency department.

People received elective surgery = the number of people admitted for elective surgery from the elective surgery waiting list in either Category 1, 2 or 3.

Category 1 – Urgent

Admission within 30 days desirable for a condition that has the potential to deteriorate quickly to the point that it may become an emergency.

Category 2 – Semi-urgent

Admission within 90 days desirable for a condition causing some pain, dysfunction or disability, but which is not likely to deteriorate quickly or become an emergency.

Category 3 – Non-urgent

Admission at some time in the future acceptable for a condition causing minimal or no pain, dysfunction or disability, which is unlikely to deteriorate quickly and which does not have the potential to become an emergency.

Long-wait

Term applied to any waiting time that exceeds the recommendation for that category.

ENDS

MEDIA: Kate Van Poelgeest 3234 1185 or 0458 449 267