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Ann: Alcidion signs major contract with Queensland Health, page-28

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    Just to paint some context on Government procurement cycles.. This is the inital media release to the $361 million strategy to slash patient wait times from September 2016.

    Media Statements

    Minister for Health and Minister for Ambulance Services
    The Honourable Cameron Dick


    Tuesday, September 06, 2016

    $361 million strategy to slash outpatient wait lists

    Queenslanders can look forward to better access to specialist outpatient appointments thanks to a Queensland-first initiative and a significant funding injection to tackle wait lists from the Palaszczuk Government.
    Minister for Health and Ambulance Services Cameron Dick said the Specialist Outpatient Strategy had been developed to tackle specialist outpatient waiting lists and improve access to specialist services by 2020.
    “This strategy marks a significant investment in the health of Queenslanders and will help ensure that patients receive improved access to specialist outpatient services,” he said.
    “Specialist outpatient services are a vital element of the patient journey.
    “They give patients access to medical specialists for diagnostic assessment, screening and treatment, allow for ongoing management of chronic and complex conditions and provide pre and post hospital care.
    “A lot of excellent work has already been done over the past 18 months to slash outpatient wait lists.
    “When our government came to office, 100,000 Queenslanders were waiting longer than the clinically recommended time for their first specialist outpatient appointment.
    “That figure is now 58,436 (as at 30 June), or a reduction of more than 40 per cent, delivered at a time when demand has increased by 10 per cent across the system.
    “That’s a strong achievement, but it’s just as important to ensure this figure continues to drop and those Queenslanders remaining on wait lists do not have to wait any longer than clinically recommended to get the appointments and treatment they need.”
    Mr Dick said the Specialist Outpatient Strategy was a key component of the Palaszczuk Government’s commitment to delivering the government’s 10-year vision for health, My Health, Queensland’s Future: Advancing Health 2026.
    “As part of our commitment to improving the health of Queenslanders, we are investing in more specialist outpatient appointments and starting the work to fix the known problems in a key part of the patient journey; that being the process to progress from a GP clinic and referral to actually accessing specialist services,” he said.
    “Our aspiration is that Queensland patients will spend less time waiting for a specialist appointment, have more control over their own healthcare and will experience a contemporary and connected healthcare system — not be left languishing on a wait list.”
    The strategy outlines 11 key investment initiatives for implementation by 2020 to improve the outpatient journey for Queenslanders:
    1. New clinical decision support tools to support GPs to make the best decisions by their patients
    2. A statewide service directory to ensure GPs know where to send their patients
    3. Electronic referral management systems to ensure patient referrals are sent to the right place first time
    4. Invest in new models of care by initiating new ways of providing optimal care
    5. More appointments across the public health system to ensure outpatients spend less time waiting
    6. More telehealth specialist services to give Queenslanders more appointments closer to home
    7. An online booking system to support patients to get appointments at a time suitable to them
    8. Ensure elective surgery is available to, if required, get patients their elective surgery at the right time
    9. Make review appointments available,if clinically required, to support patients in their journey
    10. Improve GP access to hospital information so GPs know about their patient’s hospital treatment
    11. Set clear and publicly available targets for specialist outpatient appointments to ensure patients know how long they will wait for treatment
    Mr Dick said the Specialist Outpatient Strategy provided a targeted and realistic approach to reducing the number of people waiting longer than clinically recommended for their first specialist appointment.
    “When we were elected, we promised to rebuild frontline healthcare services in Queensland and this very important strategy will help us deliver on that promise,” he said.
    “Tackling the whole patient journey takes time but I am determined to take a balanced and genuine approach that fundamentally puts the needs and expectations of our patients at the heart of our health strategy in Queensland.”
    The strategy is funded through a $361.2 million investment over four years, announced in the 2015-16 state budget.
    Mr Dick said the announcement of the strategy followed two successful Waiting Time Summits he convened last year in a bid to develop real solutions to public hospital wait list issues.
    “These summits were incredibly productive, bringing together a network of health professionals and consumer representatives, and this strategy is based on their solutions and ideas for improving our health care system,” he said.
 
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