Hospitals In Victoria Under Increasing Pressure as COVID-19 Outbreak Surges in Australia

Hospitals In Victoria Under Increasing Pressure as COVID-19 Outbreak Surges in Australia
Victorian Minister for Health Martin Foley addresses the media during a press conference in Melbourne, Australia, on June 25, 2021. (AAP Image/James Ross
AAP
By AAP
Updated:

Three Victorian hospitals are warning people not to visit emergency departments unless “absolutely necessary” due to extreme pressure from rising COVID-19 admissions and demand for testing.

Health authorities say the state will see a rapid increase in coronavirus hospitalisations in the coming days.

The number of people in hospital with the virus has risen by 123 in the past week, from 368 on December 27 to 491 on Monday.

Victoria’s seven-day hospital average jumped by 20 cases within a day, from 424 in Sunday’s figures to 444.

Western Health, which manages Sunshine, Footscray and Williamstown hospitals in Melbourne’s west, says all three are “currently under extreme pressure”.

“Please DO NOT attend the ED unless absolutely necessary,” the health service tweeted on Monday.

“Those with mild COVID symptoms seeking PCR or rapid tests should NOT ATTEND. Thank you for your cooperation.”

Western Health executive director Suellen Bruce said the warning came after extremely high levels of demand from the community, paired with COVID-related staffing issues.

“A range of factors have led to the excessive pressure: Significant staff shortages due to COVID; a high number of people with mild COVID symptoms presenting seeking a COVID test,” she said.

“The typical high demand during a public holiday period; and limited available beds within our hospitals (in part due to furloughing of staff).”

Health Minister Martin Foley described Western Health’s response as “sensible” and suggested other health networks were adopting the same approach.

All of the state’s emergency departments are facing “unprecedented demand” which is growing every day, he said.

“We are seeing business as usual - for want of a better phrase - demand continue to grow as people get out more and as people come forward for all the normal things that a health service needs to deliver,” Mr Foley told reporters on Monday.

Victoria’s COVID-19 commander Jeroen Weimar said he expected coronavirus hospitalisations would “increase quite rapidly in the days ahead”.

“If we look at the experience in New South Wales, who appear to be about a week or so ahead of us in this pandemic, they’re now starting to report quite significant numbers,” he said.

The number of people critically ill with COVID-19 in hospital has remained stable, with 56 actively infected in ICU as of Monday and 24 requiring ventilators.

However, Foley warned ICU numbers could also rise.

“If you work on the basis that we’re a week or two behind where New South Wales is now, we can’t rule out that we will continue to see an increase in COVID being managed at home in the community, an increase in hospitalisation, an increase in ICU and an increase in ventilators,” he said.

“These are not good prospects to be looking at over the course of the coming month in January.”

He urged people to get their COVID-19 vaccine booster dose as soon as they are eligible, and continue to monitor public health and social measures.

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