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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Prostate Cancer / September 2007

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would you want him as your doctor?  Cancer patient 'kept in the    dark'

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c palmer - 27 Apr 2006 03:22 GMT
 
27.04.06

By Martin Johnston
 
District health boards should tell patients about private health care
options if public hospital specialists cannot see them within six
months, the Health and Disability Commissioner says.
In the commissioner's office's first report on health-care rationing,
Ron Paterson has criticised the Southland board, one of its former
specialists and to a lesser extent a GP, over delays experienced by a
patient in his 60s who was found to have prostate cancer.
Mr Paterson's report, released today, arrives amid National's ongoing
attempts to embarrass the Government over waiting lists for elective
surgery and assessments.
The report says the patient was referred by his GP to Southland Hospital
urologist Sajan Bhatia in 2002. After looking at the patient's file and
test results, Mr Bhatia assigned him "urgent" status. The patient waited
for 22 months after the referral to be seen by the urologist before a
locum for his GP referred him to a private specialist.
The report said the delays had the potential to endanger the man, but an
expert quoted in the report found that ultimately they had not
compromised his diagnosis, treatment or outcome.
Mr Paterson said that Mr Bhatia - whom he refers to anonymously as Dr D
- assigned "urgent" status to more than half of the patients referred to
him for assessment.
"Dr D did not fulfil his responsibilities in relation to prioritisation.
He simply added Mr C to the ever-growing list of patients awaiting first
specialist assessment. Dr D's high level of assigning patients to
'urgent' meant that he was not adequately differentiating between
patients in this group."
He "must have known" that he could not see the patient within six
months, yet he did not explain this in a letter to the man's GP. If he
had, the GP might have been alerted to follow up on the referral letter
after six months or to suggest private treatment.
But the health board carried the main responsibility for ensuring the
patient and his GP were "given clarity" about when they could expect an
assessment, Mr Paterson said.
If the number of patients referred to public hospital specialists was
greater than could be dealt with, the health board was responsible for
telling patients - and their GPs - whether they would be seen within six
months.
Comprehensive information should be supplied, including the reason for
any delay, the report said.
The GP should be told to re-refer the patient if his or her condition
worsened or if other information affecting their priority became
available.
"The patient and the GP should be given clear and specific advice about
the option of seeking private assessment and treatment," Mr Paterson
said.
The board's "total failure" to provide the required information was a
breach of the code of patients' rights.
"District health boards cannot stand by passively while patients are
denied timely treatment."
The Southland board said last night it had failed the patient concerned.
Its management of the waiting list at the time was constrained by a
number of matters, including "employment-related issues". It had
subsequently implemented a range of changes which had reduced urology
waiting times.
Mr Bhatia has since resigned from Southland Hospital but has been voted
on to the board. He could not be contacted last night.
 
Author  • More by Martin
 

knowledge is power - growing old is mandatory - growing wise is optional    
"Many more men die with prostate cancer than of it. Growing old is
invariably fatal. Prostate cancer is only sometimes so."
http://community.webtv.net/PALMER_ENT/doc
rjl@pocketmail.com - 02 May 2006 10:23 GMT
Hi Martin,

I'm very interested in this issue. I remember seeing a response in the
Southland Times from Bhatia some time ago and have been interested to
see the outcome from Mr Ron Paterson. Do you have a link to the full
report by Mr Paterson, as I'd like to review it in its entirety?

Bhatia 'did not fulfil his responsibilities' in this case, I wonder
if there are others?

Cheers.

Ron
Alan Meyer - 02 May 2006 16:49 GMT
Can someone refresh our memories as to where this is taking place?
Where is Southland Hospital?  What country are we talking about.

Thanks.

   Alan
rjl@pocketmail.com - 02 May 2006 23:40 GMT
Alan,

Southland Hospital is in Invercargill, New Zealand.

http://southlandhealth.co.nz/index.jsp has an item dated 27 Apr 06 on
the issue.

Cheers.

Ron
Alan Meyer - 03 May 2006 05:12 GMT
> Alan,
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Ron

Thanks Ron.

It sounds like they have fixed some of the problems, but I'm still not
terribly impressed that patients must wait 4-6 weeks for an
appointment.
It sound like they've gotten the waiting list down from homocidally
unacceptable to merely not very good.

However I have to admit things are pretty bad everywhere.  When I had
a problem in my throat and was told that throat cancer was a slight
but conceivable possibility, I was then told by Kaiser Permanente
that it would take 3+ months to see a specialist - but not to worry,
throat cancer is slow growing.

You can imagine how re-assured I was by that.

   Alan
rjl@pocketmail.com - 03 May 2006 06:06 GMT
Alan,

I'm sorry to hear that, and no, that is not the least bit reassuring. I
trust you can (or did) explore other options to get seen sooner?

I have located the full report at:

http://www.hdc.org.nz/files/pageopinions/04hdc13909urologist,dhb.pdf

should you wish to review it.

I understand that Bhatia is on the Board of the SDHB? It seems odd that
he appears to have caused the backlog problems at the hospital over a
two year period to the point where he had to leave so the problems
could be resolved and is then accepted onto the Board!

Hopefully the 'super clinic' in Nov 04 has prevented others from
having any cancer progress through their bodies, or from having the
stress of waiting in limbo without treatment.

Regards.

Ron
rjl@pocketmail.com - 03 May 2006 22:19 GMT
All,

I may be on to something here, it appears Bhatia has been quite a
problem for the hospital, and if the article below reflects the truth
he is "a liar and a troublemaker":

http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3509758a6011,00.html

Not the sort of person you'd want to be in control of your life or your
survival.

Food for thought.

Ron
Lloyd Eszlinger - 09 Sep 2007 05:49 GMT
Just curious as to what the odds are for recurring a 3rd time. It was 10
years between the 1st time. Lloyd
> All,
>
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>
> Ron
 
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