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Parliamentary Questions


Question Without Notice No. 825 asked in the Legislative Assembly on 23 November 2021 by Mr R.S. Love

Parliament: 41 Session: 1

CORONAVIRUS — INTENSIVE CARE UNITS — REGIONS

825. Mr R.S. LOVE to the Minister for Health:

I refer to the COVID-19 emergency plan of the Australian Medical Association (WA), which calls for a planned escalation of care for regional COVID patients. Is it the government's intention that regional COVID patients be treated at home or in regional hospitals, noting that Bunbury has the only regionally based intensive care unit, or will they be transferred to metropolitan hospitals?

Mr R.H. COOK replied:

I thank the member for the question. Obviously, it is our hope that anyone who contracts the disease will be the beneficiary of a vaccination, double dose or boosted, if necessary, and will have the opportunity to access antivirals, which should be available sometime in early January. Our hope is that very few people who contract the disease will then need to be hospitalised. If they are hospitalised, obviously, it is our fervent hope that early care for that patient will not see their symptoms progress to the need for ICU care.

For the large part, patients will be able to be cared for in a hospital setting without the need to escalate them to an ICU setting. If that is the case, we have very well drilled and understood protocols with our ambulance transport services in the Royal Flying Doctor Service and St John Ambulance and are in a position to make sure that those people who are tipping into a critical state are transferred to an ICU facility in the metropolitan area to receive the very highest level of care.

As the member observed, we do have an IC unit at South West Health Campus. That would be one option, of course. But, by and large, those patients who need the very highest level of care in an ICU setting will be transferred. As I said, we have done a lot of work in our preparation to make sure that we have the necessary protocols, personal protective equipment and resources, particularly in relation to staffing, so that we can respond to any challenges that the COVID-19 pandemic throws at us.

I think that our hospitals, particularly our regional hospitals, have responded extremely well in the early days of this pandemic, and I know and I have confidence that they will once again do us proud in the event that the disease does make its way into our regional communities.