Northland DHBMonday 30 August 2010, 11:35AM
Media release from Northland DHB
The end of year results of the 2009/10 Health Targets have been
published within national and local newspapers and our results show
a solid end of year achievement with an overall increase of
performance in all areas.
Published to encourage public scrutiny of the health sector, the
six health targets cover shorter stays in the emergency department,
smoking, immunisation, diabetes and cardiovascular services as well
as reduced waiting times for critical cancer treatment and elective
surgery.
Dr Nick Chamberlain, Northland DHB's spokesperson and clinical
services general manager says Northland DHB topped two of six
health targets, with distinction awarded for elective surgery
delivery this year."
6,518 Northlanders underwent elective surgery this year, an
increase of more than 519 patients on the previous year.
"Staff from our theatres and hospital wards did an amazing job
juggling elective surgery against an unpredictable acute surgical
workload. Our general surgery, eye service and ear nose and
throat teams did particularly well and many other services
contributed to the success of this target."
Northland DHB continues to overcome challenges within its
emergency department with 86% of patients treated within six hours
of their presenting to an emergency department, still short of the
95% target.
"A whole of hospital and primary care approach is required to
resolve emergency department 'bed block' and patient flow. A
range of initiatives were introduced this year and we should expect
to see productivity gains early next year," said Dr
Chamberlain.
Immunisation is a preventative measure, and parents face the
decision of vaccinating their child against diseases parents have
heard little about or seen such as polio and rubella.
"By the time a child reaches the age of five, they and a guardian
or parent would have engaged with a number of well child or health
care providers such as a lead maternity carer (LMC), plunket nurse,
general practitioner or dental therapist."
"We are therefore looking at ways to better connect with all child
care providers who work with children and their families in
Northland."
The implementation of new data collections methods for staff, to
help hospitalised smokers quit, saw the health target for smoking
prevention leap from 12% in the first quarter to 55% in quarter
four.
"Our smokefree team have worked hard this year and nearly 500
district health board staff have been trained in the ABC approach
for smoking cessation," said Dr Chamberlain
The ABC approach is setup to ask every patient if they are
Smokefree. Staff are able to give advice on the benefits of
quitting and support the patient to quit by offering nicotine
replacement therapy and/or referring them to a cessation support
service.
Better treatment for diabetes and heart disease continues to
improve with the primary sector's performance against
cardiovascular disease risk assessment progressing at a solid
rate.
Radiotherapy is back on track, despite falling short earlier in
the year following the decommissioning of a linear accelerator at
Auckland DHB. Oncology staff at Whangarei Hospital, continue
to work closely with Auckland DHB, monitoring waiting times for
radiation oncology services to ensure Northlanders receive their
treatment within 6 weeks.
Each target is one of a number of methods we use to measure our
performance and while these new targets have been challenging to
implement, they will produce measurable gains in patient care
through steady improvement.
Health targets do not replace other health priorities but are
essential performance indicators, providing district health boards
a focus for action and can be measured as to the impact they are
making in improving health for all New Zealanders.
To obtain a copy of the Health Target results or for more
information visit the Ministry of Health's health target website www.moh.govt.nz/healthtargets.