[BREAKING] up 50 hours for a bed waiting times at hospitals now!!!

kage

Arch-Supremacy Member
Joined
Jan 1, 2000
Messages
22,231
Reaction score
9,894
Head not so big, dun wear such a big cap ...... :frown:
 

desmond_yee1

Banned
Joined
Feb 7, 2021
Messages
45,205
Reaction score
25,041
mask mandate is easily doable and does not affect the opening up but the govt does not want to lose face , die die dun want to revert back to masks wearing. Damn

must wait until things get alot worse then start taking actions. NEVER take proactive preventive actions, always wait until things happened liao then take actions
throwing old and weak under bus again
 

Callow Guy

Arch-Supremacy Member
Joined
Jan 27, 2012
Messages
10,643
Reaction score
1,836
Import some more lah... Jam up all the basic services. Pple dulan will vote the party out ..
 

kyokoto

Arch-Supremacy Member
Joined
May 27, 2005
Messages
18,339
Reaction score
6,627
I think we need 1-2 more public hospitals given the ageing population and increasing overall population. If really need to import, let's import more quality healthcare workers.
 

kyokoto

Arch-Supremacy Member
Joined
May 27, 2005
Messages
18,339
Reaction score
6,627
Mount e beds are also full according to my friend.
I'm not surprised, given the number of wealthy families and millionaires here and those who bought insurance to cover private hospitals, going to private is a no brainer decision.
 

swageat

Banned
Joined
Jul 4, 2020
Messages
23,894
Reaction score
5,367

Longer waiting times at hospitals with some patients waiting up to 50 hours for a bed​

Ng Teng Fong and Sengkang hospitals were among those with wait times of more than two days, according to patients and healthcare workers.

SINGAPORE: The waiting time for admission has surged to as high as 50 hours at some hospitals as of Wednesday (Oct 19), as public emergency departments across the country continue to see a high number of patients.

Ng Teng Fong General Hospital and Sengkang General Hospital were among those with waiting times of up to 50 hours, according to family members of patients and healthcare workers CNA spoke to.

This is higher than the latest data available from the Ministry of Health's website, which showed that the median waiting time for admission to wards from emergency departments was between one hour and 24.2 hours for the week of Sep 25.

Data for Oct 2 onwards has not been released yet.

CNA has contacted both hospitals for more information.

One man, who wanted to be known only as Mr Ng, said his mother had to wait 25 hours for a bed, after being brought to Ng Teng Fong General Hospital by ambulance on Tuesday afternoon because her legs started swelling.

Due to stricter safe management measures, he was not allowed to accompany his mother, who is 100 years old, inside.

“I’m very worried because I couldn't go in with her and speak to the doctor to tell them about her dietary needs and conditions,” said the 70-year-old in Mandarin, adding that his mother has advanced dementia.

According to Mr Ng, a doctor eventually called him an hour later to find out more about his mother’s condition over the past few days and said that she was currently stable.

“(At the time) they said they would only update me once she gets a bed, so I think she was put up at the A&E ward. I was worried that she might be cold there and whether anyone would give her a blanket or feed her,” he said. "It was just a lot of waiting."

It was a similar situation to what Ms Evelyn Lim experienced two weeks ago, when she brought her 73-year-old mother to Singapore General Hospital for suspected internal bleeding.

According to Ms Lim, it took nearly 20 hours before her mother was admitted to a ward. While waiting for an available bed, her mother was put up at the hospital’s Ambulatory Surgery Centre.

“It was very crowded and noisy there and from what I could see, there were a lot of patients with their beds pushed closely to one another and it spilled over to the main walkways as well,” said Ms Lim.

Among hospitals tracked by the Ministry of Health, latest figures show that daily bed occupancy rates ranged from 74.7 per cent to 97.6 per cent between Sep 25 and Oct 1.

The ongoing bed crunch could also be due to an increase in patients with severe conditions, according to healthcare workers CNA spoke to.

“A lot of older people didn't go to see a GP doctor or get their medications refilled during the COVID-19 pandemic, and just let it lapse for whatever reason,” said one senior doctor who works at a public hospital.

“So the patients who are coming in are sicker and because of that, they have to stay in the hospital.”

Manpower constraints at her hospital have also been exacerbated by the current wave of COVID-19 cases, with more staff members testing positive for the virus.

“A lot of junior doctors are getting sick and because there's so many of them that are sick, there's nobody to recall. So then seniors end up having to cover them,” she said. “It’s a vicious cycle and just feels endless, so we all feel very exhausted.”

Healthcare workers interviewed for this story were not identified as they were not authorised to speak to the media.

A junior doctor CNA spoke to said the average waiting time at the public hospital he works at was about one day.

He said the longer wait could be due to a combination of factors, including the ongoing flu season and the spike in COVID-19 cases. But he added that even before this, hospitals have been packed.

A Ministry of Health spokesperson told CNA that emergency departments have been seeing a high number of patients for a few months. While most patients have conditions not related to COVID-19, the rising infection caseload exacerbates the situation.

“All cases presenting at the ED are triaged and priority care will continue to be given to critically ill patients at the ED,” said the spokesperson.

The ministry urged members of the public to go to the hospital emergency departments only for emergencies.

“We also appeal to everyone to play their part in alleviating the load on our public hospitals by visiting the general practitioner or polyclinic doctor first if they are experiencing mild respiratory symptoms and/or non-life-threatening conditions,” it said.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/sin...hours-admission-ng-teng-fong-sengkang-3014596


Kqsn4If.gif



giphy.gif
 

BarretteReunion8

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 4, 2022
Messages
1,705
Reaction score
741
Import some more lah... Jam up all the basic services. Pple dulan will vote the party out ..
they voting out wun happen
1st, so long they dun touch half the citizens, the females, their votes auto go to them... SPG sure vote for them cos mentality is the same, we need to OPEN MORE FOR FTs
2nd, they just need to covert more who come from poorer conditions than sg, their votes auto go to them

your boys and kpkb about covid doesn't matter
 

matey1982

Banned
Joined
Oct 22, 2018
Messages
64,678
Reaction score
14,933

Longer waiting times at hospitals with some patients waiting up to 50 hours for a bed​

Ng Teng Fong and Sengkang hospitals were among those with wait times of more than two days, according to patients and healthcare workers.

SINGAPORE: The waiting time for admission has surged to as high as 50 hours at some hospitals as of Wednesday (Oct 19), as public emergency departments across the country continue to see a high number of patients.

Ng Teng Fong General Hospital and Sengkang General Hospital were among those with waiting times of up to 50 hours, according to family members of patients and healthcare workers CNA spoke to.

This is higher than the latest data available from the Ministry of Health's website, which showed that the median waiting time for admission to wards from emergency departments was between one hour and 24.2 hours for the week of Sep 25.

Data for Oct 2 onwards has not been released yet.

CNA has contacted both hospitals for more information.

One man, who wanted to be known only as Mr Ng, said his mother had to wait 25 hours for a bed, after being brought to Ng Teng Fong General Hospital by ambulance on Tuesday afternoon because her legs started swelling.

Due to stricter safe management measures, he was not allowed to accompany his mother, who is 100 years old, inside.

“I’m very worried because I couldn't go in with her and speak to the doctor to tell them about her dietary needs and conditions,” said the 70-year-old in Mandarin, adding that his mother has advanced dementia.

According to Mr Ng, a doctor eventually called him an hour later to find out more about his mother’s condition over the past few days and said that she was currently stable.

“(At the time) they said they would only update me once she gets a bed, so I think she was put up at the A&E ward. I was worried that she might be cold there and whether anyone would give her a blanket or feed her,” he said. "It was just a lot of waiting."

It was a similar situation to what Ms Evelyn Lim experienced two weeks ago, when she brought her 73-year-old mother to Singapore General Hospital for suspected internal bleeding.

According to Ms Lim, it took nearly 20 hours before her mother was admitted to a ward. While waiting for an available bed, her mother was put up at the hospital’s Ambulatory Surgery Centre.

“It was very crowded and noisy there and from what I could see, there were a lot of patients with their beds pushed closely to one another and it spilled over to the main walkways as well,” said Ms Lim.

Among hospitals tracked by the Ministry of Health, latest figures show that daily bed occupancy rates ranged from 74.7 per cent to 97.6 per cent between Sep 25 and Oct 1.

The ongoing bed crunch could also be due to an increase in patients with severe conditions, according to healthcare workers CNA spoke to.

“A lot of older people didn't go to see a GP doctor or get their medications refilled during the COVID-19 pandemic, and just let it lapse for whatever reason,” said one senior doctor who works at a public hospital.

“So the patients who are coming in are sicker and because of that, they have to stay in the hospital.”

Manpower constraints at her hospital have also been exacerbated by the current wave of COVID-19 cases, with more staff members testing positive for the virus.

“A lot of junior doctors are getting sick and because there's so many of them that are sick, there's nobody to recall. So then seniors end up having to cover them,” she said. “It’s a vicious cycle and just feels endless, so we all feel very exhausted.”

Healthcare workers interviewed for this story were not identified as they were not authorised to speak to the media.

A junior doctor CNA spoke to said the average waiting time at the public hospital he works at was about one day.

He said the longer wait could be due to a combination of factors, including the ongoing flu season and the spike in COVID-19 cases. But he added that even before this, hospitals have been packed.

A Ministry of Health spokesperson told CNA that emergency departments have been seeing a high number of patients for a few months. While most patients have conditions not related to COVID-19, the rising infection caseload exacerbates the situation.

“All cases presenting at the ED are triaged and priority care will continue to be given to critically ill patients at the ED,” said the spokesperson.

The ministry urged members of the public to go to the hospital emergency departments only for emergencies.

“We also appeal to everyone to play their part in alleviating the load on our public hospitals by visiting the general practitioner or polyclinic doctor first if they are experiencing mild respiratory symptoms and/or non-life-threatening conditions,” it said.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/sin...hours-admission-ng-teng-fong-sengkang-3014596
50 hours lah
not 500 hours

MOH will say an lai
ai pi ai qi dua liap nee
 

Geeezz

Arch-Supremacy Member
Joined
Sep 20, 2010
Messages
13,236
Reaction score
188
it’s not living with covid that’s the problem. ish the lack of hospital and manpower. like someone just posted, things like this will got more common as year goes on due to ageing population. have to solve it now rather than later.
 

pm_me_ur_noods

Supremacy Member
Joined
May 2, 2015
Messages
7,220
Reaction score
1,139
mask mandate is easily doable and does not affect the opening up but the govt does not want to lose face , die die dun want to revert back to masks wearing. Damn

must wait until things get alot worse then start taking actions. NEVER take proactive preventive actions, always wait until things happened liao then take actions

PREVENTION is better than CURE.. they million dollars ministers dun know this logic?

mandate mask kena say
No mask also kena say

No wonder need million dollar salary
 

desmond_yee1

Banned
Joined
Feb 7, 2021
Messages
45,205
Reaction score
25,041
what we should be worrying is will doctors rush off patients who already got a bed but yet fully recovered to discharge in order to free up bed space
 
Important Forum Advisory Note
This forum is moderated by volunteer moderators who will react only to members' feedback on posts. Moderators are not employees or representatives of HWZ. Forum members and moderators are responsible for their own posts.

Please refer to our Community Guidelines and Standards, Terms of Service and Member T&Cs for more information.
Top