Green Light for Waitemata DHB Renal Service, Unit
MEDIA RELEASE
Tuesday 17 November
A
long-awaited comprehensive renal service and unit is to
become a reality at North Shore Hospital following approval
of a three-phase plan by the Waitemata DHB board.
In
phase one of the five-10 year programme, Waitemata renal
inpatients currently treated at Auckland DHB will be
transferred to Waitemata’s care from 2011, and a new renal
unit will be established.
The purpose-built, one-level
renal facility will be constructed on the North Shore
Hospital site to provide in-centre renal dialysis for people
with kidney failure.
Construction of the unit will
start before mid-next year next year and the $9.2 million
facility will be operational from around July 2011. It will
accommodate up to 48 haemodialysis patients a day, as well
as a peritoneal dialysis unit.
Meanwhile planning and
recruitment for the new renal service, including the
appointment of four nephrologists and key nursing positions,
is already well underway.
The service will diagnose
and manage all forms of kidney disease, care for patients
before and after kidney transplants, and provide on-site
support for other hospital services.
An existing
clinic to manage and treat high blood pressure, a key cause
of kidney disease, will also be enhanced by the appointment
of a hypertension nurse specialist.
Currently Auckland
DHB provides almost all renal services for Waitemata
residents from its central Auckland sites, meaning Waitemata
patients must travel long distances three times a week, for
4-6 hour dialysis sessions.
Respected nephrologist and
clinical leader of Waitemata’s new service, Dr Walter Van
Der Merwe, says the new service will make an enormous
difference to these people.
“I think it’s very
exciting and long overdue. We’re in the privileged
position of having a clean slate to work from and the people
in the Waitemata area will benefit greatly from locally
provided services.”
The new renal service will also
mean dialysis patients needing elective procedures, such as
joint replacements, will be able to undergo their operation
at North Shore Hospital, closer to home. Currently dialysis
services aren’t available at the hospital to support this
happening.
Presently around 220 Waitemata residents
are on dialysis. Existing Waitemata renal patients will
start transferring from Auckland to Waitemata DHB from July
2011, and all new dialysis patients will be cared for by the
Waitemata service from this date.
The entire patient
transfer is expected to be complete by 2013, though Auckland
DHB will still perform kidney transplants for Waitemata
patients and care for them in the first two-months after
surgery.
Management and governance of the Waitakere
Hospital-based renal facility, currently run by Auckland
DHB, will also transfer to Waitemata DHB from June
2010.
“We are looking forward to working in
partnership with Auckland DHB to ensure a seamless
transition for patients and to ensure everyone’s wellbeing
is cared for,” Dr Van Der Merwe says.
In the
second phase of the programme, additional community-based
satellite facilities will be provided where more patients
can manage, or partially manage, their own dialysis, while
the third phase will establish home haemodialysis training
and vascular
surgery.
ENDS