CPR administered in corridor as nurses denounce 'critical' bed situation at MDH
Emergency Nurses Union hs expressed ‘concern’ at the situation in the Accident & Emergency Department of Mater Dei Hospital as patient given CPR in corridor.
In a statement, the nurses denounced the critical bed situation, explaining that "at 7am there were 31 patients waiting for a bed. Most of these patients had been waiting for a bed on a stretcher for more than 24 hours in the middle of a corridor in Area 2, which is part of the Accident & Emergency Department itself."
"At 6.45am one of these vulnerable patients went into cardiac arrest, which means that immediate care including a CPR had to be started in the middle of such area surrounded by other patients without any privacy for the patient. The patient was then transferred to one of the resuscitation rooms where A&E nurses & doctors, and nurses working in Area 2 during the night of Sunday 14th took part in this resuscitation."
The union called on the Health Department to take the immediate necessary actions to avoid such situations which were putting patients’ health and staff safety at risk.
Doctors defend their position
Meanwhile, the Medical Association refuted the suggestion that GPs were making unnecessary referrals to Mater Dei, compounding the bed shortage problem.
"Statistics show that more than half of attendances at Accident and Emergency are self referred, meaning that they had not been seen by a family doctor. While this is understandable for major emergencies, it is this problem that results in unnecessary congestion and bottlenecks," MAM said..
"Every medical practitioner decides independently using his professional judgment. In the practice of Medicine sometimes even minor complaints need urgent referral to hospital. The opposite may also apply; patients with subjectively major complaints sometimes do not need referral to hospital and can be safely managed in the community.
"Every medical practitioner is taught from his early days of medical school, that if the situation is unclear, one should refer for further investigation rather than take unnecessary risks with patients’ health. While a number of these patients will inevitably not have medical problems, this does not mean that referral was not indicated."
The association stressed that it was completely "unacceptable for anyone to put the blame of administrative problems at the Accident and Emergency department on family doctors," while inviting the health authorities to tackle the problem seriously.