NZ Surgical Services Inadequate In An Emergency
For immediate release April 16, 2007
Current NZ Surgical Services Inadequate In An Emergency Says Royal Australasian College Of Surgeons
The New Zealand branch of the Royal
Australasian College of
Surgeons (RACS) supports the view
of Australian trauma experts that New
Zealand hospitals
are not adequately resourced to cope with a
large-scale
natural disaster, major accident or terrorist
attack.
Commenting on an Australasian Trauma Society study
assessing facilities
in New Zealand and Australian
hospitals against international benchmarks
for major
crises RACS spokesman, Waikato Trauma Surgeon Grant
Christey
said a great deal of work is needed to get our
hospitals ready for
mass-casualty events.
"The
Australasian study published today clearly shows that
our
hospitals will struggle to cope with a mass-casualty
event. New Zealand
is at the bottom of the pile when it
comes to the key benchmarks for
hospital mass-casualty
capability, and despite the tendency of Kiwis to
go to
great lengths to help out when a disaster occurs we need
to
continue to plan for the unthinkable. We may have a
lower perceived terrorist threat than Australia but we have
transport and industrial threats and live on a geologic
plate boundary with major seismic and
volcanic
activity.
RACS supports the view that the everyone
involved in disaster
management takes heed of the
available evidence and ensures the current
initiatives
for serious mass-casualty planning keep marching
ahead,"
Mr Christey said.
Ends