COMMUNICATIONS
Media Release - 23/03/07
An additional 975 surgery patients will be treated in the next four months by Canterbury District Health Board as a result of an extra $3.2 million in government funding provided to the Board this financial year and a further $1 million allocated to elective services by the CDHB. The first of these operations will be performed this month
This money is an addition to an extra $1.7 million that has been spent by the CDHB on treating people who were last year returned to GP care from the CDHB booking system.
The government money is part of a package of $200 million
over four years, which will see extra operations performed in Canterbury for
patients with a wide range of diseases and conditions. Nationally, the funding
boost is expected to increase elective treatment capacity by around 10,000
people each year over the next four years.
In Canterbury, this financial year, 113 more patients will get the general
surgery they need, including people waiting for abdominal and thyroid surgery.
Other operations involve a range of specialties. About 220 people will have a
colonoscopy and 41 will get access to cardiology procedures. Another 110 women
will benefit from gynaecological procedures and about 42 men from prostate and
other urology operations. A total of 66 children will receive the dental surgery
that they need and 132 adults and children will be able to have their tonsils
and/or adenoids removed. A total of 95 orthopaedic procedures other than hip and
knee replacements are scheduled.
”We are delighted to be able to offer these extra operations to Canterbury
people. As well as being a bonus for our patients, it will be very rewarding
time for front line staff in providing more treatment for people who need it,”
CDHB CEO Gordon Davies said.
The additional operations will be performed within CDHB hospitals and by a
number of private providers including Southern Cross Hospital, St George’s
Hospital, Oxford Clinic Hospital and Canterbury Orthopaedic Services. About 459
of the additional operations will be performed privately as CDHB services
generally work at full capacity and do not have the resources for large numbers
of additional operations.
The government funding for the additional operations has been made available to DHBs that are compliant with the national electives policy, which says that people need to know whether they will be able to see a specialist within six months and whether they will receive their operation.
“This system is about providing patients with clarity,
timeliness and fairness around when and if they will receive treatment. Not
everyone will meet the threshold for surgery on their first presentation and we
need to be open and honest about this,” Mr Davies said.
ENDS