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No Hospital Bed Crunch For Foreign Drug Addicts?

Chau Ve Nist

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Compare....

http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/...-government-loan/story-e6freooo-1225836697452


Dying drug addict to get government loan

Anthony DeCeglie From: PerthNow March 03, 2010 6:54PM

THE West Australian State Government will lend the family of a dying Perth drug addict $258,000 to travel to Singapore so she can have possibly life-saving surgery.

The loan will be interest free, PerthNow reports.

Claire Murray, a 24-year-old mother-of-two, has been told by doctors that she only has months to live if she does not receive a liver transplant.

She has admitted to taking drugs after her first liver transplant last year - but has pledged to make the most of her second chance at life after being told she could not be considered for a second transplant in WA.

There are seven other people in WA who were waiting for their first liver transplant.

Doctors say it would be unfair for Ms Murray to jump the queue for a second liver.

But, Dr Hames said the WA Government was prepared to pay for her and her father to travel to Singapore so she could be considered for a "live" liver transplant.

Family members of Ms Murray have agreed to act as guarantors to the loan.

The procedure would use a piece of a liver from a living family member, but it is understood that Ms Murray's father is not a compatible donor.

It is understood that doctors at the Asian Centre for Liver Diseases and Transplantation in Singapore have carried out more than 100 successful live donor liver transplants.




and contrast...


Hospital bed crunch Figures don't tell the whole story

147th Prostitute Press 7 March 2010

Some patients have to wait many hours before a bed can be found

Call it the mystery of the 'missing' beds.

At first glance, the figures look reassuring.

The six public hospitals here, on average, say they have occupancy rates in the mid-80s.

This means that for every 100 beds, there should be about 15 empty ones, right? But the reality is different.

Patients are accommodated in beds placed in corridors until space is available in the ward, as has been reported in Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH).

They might have to wait many hours in the Accident and Emergency (A&E) Department before a bed can be found. Or they are told that their non-urgent operation - for example, the removal of a cancer tumour or a hernia - may have to be deferred for weeks or even months.

Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan spoke about the bed crunch last week in Parliament.

He cited one example at TTSH, where 5 per cent of A&E patients waited for more than eight hours for a bed in January, though half got a bed within two hours. TTSH gets more A&E patients - more than 500 a day - than any other hospital in Singapore.

So where are the empty beds?

First, it must be said that hospitals must set aside some vacant beds at all times for emergency cases.

A hospital cannot turn away an ambulance that comes with someone suffering, say, a heart attack.

Said Mr T.K. Udairam, Changi General Hospital's chief executive officer: 'We need to have at least one to two intensive care unit (ICU) beds free every evening in case of bad trauma. We must have the beds available.'

Private hospitals, which need to maximise income, said the ideal occupancy rate is between 70 per cent and 80 per cent. Above that, and they start planning for contingencies.

An average occupancy rate in the 80s, as is the case for public hospitals, is tight by hospital standards.

The occupancy figures also do not tell the whole story. An annual average occupancy rate of 85 per cent means there are days when the hospital is overflowing with patients.

At other times - such as during the recent long Chinese New Year weekend - it may have more empty beds. People understandably do not opt for non-major surgery during the festive period. Which was why, in the second week of February, in the run-up to Chinese New Year, TTSH had an occupancy rate of 75 per cent. This was a far cry from its January average of 89 per cent.

Another fact is that occupancy figures are taken at midnight. Patients are discharged the previous afternoon or evening. New ones admitted for treatment come in the following morning. Some are warded after morning operations.

At Changi General Hospital (CGH), for example, patients can be discharged any time up to 10pm.

TTSH's 89 per cent occupancy rate at midnight includes beds that have been booked by patients who will be admitted the following morning.

But what if these beds are taken up after midnight by emergency cases? It means that those who turn up with surgical appointments the following day might have to have their operations put on hold.

'At 85 per cent occupancy, I begin to worry. I have very little leeway for emergencies,' said Mr Udairam.

CGH gets about 450 patients a day at its A&E department. Fortunately, not all will need to be warded. But even if just one in 10 has to be hospitalised, that is 45 beds needed a day - about 18 per cent of beds at the 790-bed hospital.

If the hospital was 85 per cent full - that is, only 15 per cent of beds are empty - it would not be able to cater to even 10 per cent of its A&E patients.

In reality, about one in five who turn up at the A&E needs to be warded.

Of course, patients come through the A&E at all times of the day or night. So occupancy rates are very fluid and can fluctuate from hour to hour.

In the last week of February, CGH's occupancy rate was 91 per cent, Mr Khaw said.

CGH sends some of its more stable and less ill patients to the adjoining St Andrew's Community Hospital on days when it faces very tight bed situations.

The National University Hospital too said that on weekdays, 'it is not uncommon for our bed occupancy rate to be above 90 per cent and demand for both private and subsidised beds is high'.

So is Singapore facing a bed crunch? Obviously, the answer is yes.

Does patient care suffer? Patients are not dying because of the shortage, but if delays in treatment are considered poorer service, then the answer is, again, yes.

Will things get better? At least here, the answer is more positive.

When the 555-bed Khoo Teck PuatHospital opens its wards in September, the severe shortage of beds should ease. And the 700-bed Jurong General Hospital will be up by 2014.
 

mustspeakup

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This is the same guy who happily announced that sgp will become a medical hub for foreigners who wished to received treatment by flying in from abroad and now this bed crunch situation?

Why are million dollar men reactive than proactive and plan ahead!
 
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