Hawke's Bay Hospital put into lockdown
Photo:
RNZ / Tom Kitchin
Hawke's Bay Hospital and nearby schools are in lockdown after reports of a person acting suspiciously.
Police were called to the hospital in Hastings at 1.20pm.
The lockdowns are precautionary, police said.
Health NZ has been approached for comment .
- more to come
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She said the teen's poor outcome was attributed to the delay by the air retrieval team in transferring him. However, his care was triaged and prioritised appropriately based on the information available to the team at the time, Caldwell said. An initial referral was made at 6pm and triaged by the flight coordinator with input from a senior medical consultant. Because he was considered neurologically stable and the air retrieval team was scheduled to return from another job, a collective decision was made to depart the next morning, with an expected arrival back by early afternoon. The air retrieval team stated that this was the nature of prioritisation under a resource-constrained environment, Caldwell said. On the morning of the scheduled transfer, a further delay occurred because a flight nurse had to stand down for rest after attending an overnight retrieval. Efforts were made to contact other flight nurses and intensive care nurses who were not on the roster, but none were available. At the time, the air retrieval team had been experiencing increased demands but nurse staffing levels had not increased, Caldwell said. She said between March 2015 and March 2016, there were 60 occasions when a second retrieval had been requested but could not respond. An expert's advice was that road transfer could have been considered as an alternative option but the surgeon disagreed. He said that in his experience, moving patients by road had led to a negative outcome, because of the lack of ambulance staff and inability of the ambulances to cross boundaries between healthcare districts at the time. List of changes made since The air retrieval team had since made a comprehensive list of changes, including additional nursing staff, and has introduced improved communication and operational guidelines. Caldwell said a 'significant number of changes' to the health sector had since been made. She said the amalgamation of the 20 district health boards into Health NZ had created better service integration, sharing of resources, and communication between treating teams. Health NZ Southern and Health NZ Waitaha Canterbury districts were asked to provide a formal written apology for the breaches identified in the report. Tracy Neal, Open Justice reporter