Government investment in Manning Hospital is not dependent on the expired Lower Mid North Coast Clinical Services Plan, according to Hunter New England Local Health District chief executive officer, Michael DiRienzo.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
Mr DiRienzo is adamant NSW Health will not exclude Manning Hospital from future funding because the plan expired in 2017.
“That’s a bit of a myth out there,” Mr DiRienzo said.
Mr DiRienzo says “there are a whole range of planning documents” used by Hunter New England Local Health District (HNELHD) to communicate the district’s needs to NSW Health and cites an annual strategic asset plan as being a key document in identifying priorities to government.
“The reason why the $40 million Manning Hospital development got up is because we identified that in our strategic asset plan.
“We do that each year, and for last year, that’s what brought us the additional $20 million that has come into this latest stage of development,” Mr DiRienzo said.
“Have I been going out there trying to talk more about the hospital, no, what I’ve been doing is basically using the facts and data that we do have, putting it in our strategic asset plan and allowing NSW Health to advise government about what they see as the priorities.”
Mr DiRienzo describes the clinical services plan as “still relatively current for us.”
The reason why the $40 million Manning Hospital development got up is because we identified that in our strategic asset plan.
- Michael DiRienzo
No update
“We are not going to embark on a clinical services plan if there isn’t some commitment to doing something with the plan in the future – we as a district just don’t go out there and say, let’s do a clinical services plan,” Mr DiRienzo explained. “It is typically undertaken when there is concern over certain service gaps and you want to actually look at it from a more macro approach.”
A push to update the clinical services plan is part of a public health campaign led by the Manning Great Lakes Community Health Action Group (MGLCHAG). The group has around 1000 members and is proactive in its public and political campaigning on issues relating to health services and infrastructure funding in the region.
“Update the clinical services plan because we the committee, we the community, want to come to the next election with a game plan that says we need x-amount of dollars to deliver this much to the community for this benefit, but we are not getting that from HNELHD,” Mr Tickle said.
New services
Mr DiRienzo urges MGLCHAG and the community to look back “five or seven years ago” and contends “the range of services provided at this hospital now far exceed what we had in the past.
“The district has invested significantly in stabilising the senior medical workforce within Manning Hospital with more staff specialists.
“Alongside the financial investment, the district has also looked for staff with a commitment to ongoing training and development to support doctors who are early on in their career and to encourage more medical professionals to live and work in the Taree and Great Lakes region.”
Emergency
Mr DiRienzo said the emergency department at Manning Hospital “historically relied on locum doctors, rotating medical staff who were still in training, or doctors with a general medical focus.”
“The emergency department now has five full-time equivalent senior medical officers providing emergency medical coverage. The current model is made up of a staff specialist Director of Emergency Medicine, Dr Mustafa Majeed Omar and senior GP visiting medical officers. We have also increased nursing staff levels in the past year as activity has increased.
“Alongside the investment in the emergency department, we have focused on recruiting senior medical officers to provide leadership and supervision to locum and junior doctors. As well as Dr Omar in the emergency department, the recent employment of Dr Rob Hislop, Director of the Intensive Care Unit, and Dr Nigel Roberts, Director of Obstetrics and Gynaecology has brought senior leadership and stability to the medical services.
“We’ve also welcomed Dr Charles Estibiero as a staff specialist psychiatrist working with the Manning Mental Health Services and Dr Stefan Lang as a staff specialist anaesthetist.”
Mr DiRienzo said the appointment of permanent specialists to the medical workforce allows for the introduction of new clinics and procedures to Manning Hospital, enabling people to access health services close to home.
The Hunter New England Health District is the largest in NSW, spans 25 local government areas and serves more than 920,000, according to its website.
Priorities
Listing district priorities is a function of the annual strategic asset plan and Mr DiRienzo says “our number one priority is the John Hunter campus.”
“In terms of the Manning Hospital redevelopment to date, that’s been there in our top 10 or so priorities,” he said.
“The reason why John Hunter is the number one …