HACSU rings alarm at progress to address ramping at the RHH

Posted on 25 July, 2024

Media Releases

The Health and Community Services Union (HACSU) today raised serious concerns about the implementation of the ambulance offload (ramping) procedure at the state’s largest public hospital, the Royal Hobart Hospital.

Over the coming months, the state government target is to have 100% of all ambulance cases offloaded within 60 Minutes. Currently the overall target is set at 85%.

By way of explanation, the protocol has a staged % process over a period of time that has each hospital moving towards to 100% within a set number of days. The RHH implemented the procedure on 22 April 2024, therefore at the mandated 241-day mark (100%) the date will be 19 December 2024.

While it is accepted that during periods of increased demand or where there may be multi-casualty incidents these times may spike, HACSU is concerned at the progress with implementing procedures on a day-to-day basis at the RHH which, when compared with the other major Tasmanian hospitals, remains the poorest performer.

“Paramedics are continuously frustrated with delays in patient flow at the hospital. We are still seeing patients unnecessarily languishing in corridors at the RHH for hours on some occasions,” HACSU State Secretary Robbie Moore said.

“But the evidence is in - when it is escalated properly and activated through the mandated escalation pathway, the offload procedure works and we see patients moving out of the emergency department almost immediately. This is good for patients, it creates flow in the emergency department and gets our ambulances back into the community,” he added.

Given the ongoing problems paramedics are experiencing with ramping at the RHH, HACSU has called on the Secretary of the Department of Health to convene a round table of all stakeholders to cooperatively address the barriers preventing patient flow at the RHH and address what is a safety issue for patients, paramedics and emergency department staff.

For more information about this or any other industrial matter, members should contact HACSUassist on 1300 880 032 or email [email protected] or complete our online contact form

All other posts in

Media Releases

HACSU demands Roger Jaensch attends meeting to discuss Child Safety and Youth Justice Agreement

"We need Roger Jaensch at the table, or if he’s not up to it, the Premier."

Child safety and youth justice workers stage half-day action at Parliament Lawns

Hobart Child Safety and Youth Justice workers are escalating their action.

Medical Imaging workers ramp up strike action as government stalls on pay talks

Medical Imaging workers at the RHH escalate their industrial action in protest over the critical staffing shortage and the government stalling on pay talks.

Child safety workers in Launceston take stop work action

Child safety workers in Launceston continue statewide stop work action over the government’s insufficient staffing plan.

Child safety workers stop work over government’s inadequate staffing plan

Workers at Child Safety Services and Youth Justice across the state demand immediate, comprehensive and meaningful solutions to address the staffing crisis.

LGH pathology workers stop work over ongoing resourcing issues

Union members in Pathology do not take the decision to stop work lightly, but feel they have no other choice until there is a solution to the current staffing issues put on the table.

HACSU rings alarm at progress to address ramping at the RHH

HACSU raises serious concerns about the implementation of the ambulance offload (ramping) procedure at the RHH.

Critical staffing shortage delays use of RHH's new $8 million CT/Angio suite

The suite will not be used until the government urgently intervenes to fix the department’s staffing crisis.

Medical imaging workers launch industrial action amid historic high staff shortages

Medical imaging workers launch unprecedented industrial action amid historic high staff shortages.