Advertisement

Urgent calls for more cardiologists in Bundaberg

October 5, 2022 7:09 am in by

310338449_776883403400934_3083471679925286827_n.jpg

A local cardiologist says getting more heart doctors to the region is a matter of urgency.

Bundaberg will soon be left with just two specialists due to others relocating or retiring.

Member for Hinkler Keith Pitt says with over 1,700 patients from the Wide Bay last year alone receiving cardiology care when three interventional cardiologists practised locally, it is expected that wait lists will blow out and patients are likely to be air lifted to Brisbane for urgent heart surgery, putting lives at risk.

“The Wide Bay has an ageing population, in a lower income area that has high rates of cardiac disease. All three of these factors combine to prove that we desperately need to attract and retain local cardiologists here in the Wide Bay,” he says.

“When you have a heart attack time is of the essence. Patients need to be wheeled into an operating theatre not into an ambulance to have them air lifted to a hospital down south just because we can’t get cardiologists in Bundaberg or Hervey Bay due to a technical issue with the way workforce shortages are calculated.”

Mr Pitt explains each specialist has a Medicare provider number that is linked to the geographic region they are working in – in this instance, the Wide Bay region which takes in Bundaberg, Hervey Bay and Maryborough.

“If a specialist no longer bills in that area their provider number remains active, so on paper it looks like there are sufficient specialists in the region,” he says.

“This is having a flow-on effect when a District Workforce Shortage exemption is applied for and then refused, because according to the data, we have ample cardiologists.

“I’ve asked the Minister for Health to intervene and rectify this District Workforce Shortage data issue, something as simple as an annual audit from the Department to ensure it accurately reflects the number of Cardiologists practicing in the region.”

He’s launched a petition calling for a change to the system.

Cardiologist Dr Hermann Wittmer is backing the push saying the need for interventional cardiologists in the Wide Bay region has escalated with emergency outpatient presentations and inpatient admissions through the public hospitals.

“We want the best healthcare outcome for the people that live in the Wide Bay region and right now, that is under threat,” Dr Wittmer says.

“Myself, Dr Andre Conradie and Prof. Angus Thompson provide significant services to the Wide Bay Hospital and Health Service including urgent intervention procedures, pacemaker insertion, stents and angiography, as well as daily ward rounds, specialist outpatient clinics and heart failure clinics.

“Without this change that Mr Pitt is lobbying for, we won’t be able to recruit interventional cardiologists to treat patients in the Wide Bay region and will need to rely on locums, which is not feasible long term and doesn’t provide continuity of care for patients.

“We’ve applied for exemptions for specialists to work in the region but they are rejected based on out-dated data. This situation could be rectified by the Department undertaking an audit on provider numbers which are no longer used to ensure they are making decisions on accurate information.”

Image: ARN

Advertisement