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Australia: Camden Hospital nurse speaks out over inadequate
healthcare
By Erika Zimmer and Leanne Jones
28 January 2004
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Over the last five months newspapers in Sydney, Australias
largest city, have published a number of articles about increasing
incidents of accidental deaths in the public hospital system in
the state of New South Wales. One of the most alarming reports
concerned the death of 19 patients caused by inadequate medical
care at Campbelltown and Camden Hospitals in Sydneys outer
western suburbs.
Evidence of the tragedies came to light after several nurses,
including Sherree Martin, Nola Fraser, Vanessa Bragg, Valerie
Owen and Yvonne Quinn, decided to confront NSW health minister
Craig Knowles in November 2002 over the deaths.
While Knowles and the state Labor government responded to
the nurses concerns with a series of denials and threats,
the nurses, who were victimised and forced out of their jobs,
refused to be intimidated and spent the next year fighting to
expose the issue (See: Deaths
in Sydney hospitals used to boost private health care).
Unable to prevent public discussion on the Campbelltown
and Camden Hospital deaths, the Carr government, aided by the
media and the Liberal Party opposition, is now attempting to scapegoat
hospital personnel and discredit the public health system. At
the same time it has convened several limited investigations into
the deaths at Campelltown and Camden hospitals, including an inquiry
by a barrister, Brett Walker.
Sherree Martin recently spoke with WSWS reporters Erika
Zimmer and Leanne Jones. She began by explaining that although
she started work at Camden Hospital as a casual enrolled nurse
in May 2001, it was not until she took up a permanent part-time
position at Camden Medical Ward in May 2002 that a clearer picture
of the sub-standard practices at the hospital emerged.
Sherree Martin: I saw practices
I didnt like. For example, a full days medications,
even antibiotics, would be given out in the one go when you are
supposed to have them every six hours. When a patients blood
pressure drops below 90 systolic, its mandatory to press
the bell and call the Medical Emergency Team [MET]a doctor
and nurse from the Intensive Care Unitwho provide acute
care. But this was not being done. Nurses would position patients
with their head down and feet elevated until their blood pressure
reached 91, when it was not longer mandatory to call the MET team.
Their low blood pressure was not being recorded.
Patients found not breathing were not being resuscitated, even
though they didnt have a Not For Resuscitation [NFR] order.
I remember the distressed son of an elderly patient being reassured
by the doctor on the phone, Well do all we can.
I remember him being so grateful.
But the truth was horrendous because the doctor was trying
to get the woman to sign the NFR order. He was saying to her,
You dont want me to put a big tube down your throat
do you? Or be jumping on your chest and pushing on your heart.
Its time for you to go isnt it?
The patient was saying, No, I dont want to die,
doctor and the doctor would reply, You cant
take up a bed. Weve got no beds in Intensive Care.
I was standing there and she was holding my hand and asking, You
wont let me die, nurse? I said, No. Well
do everything we can but I was just a liar because I knew
this doctor.
This woman was admitted after having a heart attack. She had
a letter from her doctor confirming this but they put her in a
medical ward because there were no beds in the Intensive Care
Unit. She went into cardiogenic shock because she was not being
treated for heart attack but for a urinary tract infection. Three
times I called the MET and three times they said there was no
bed. This woman would not have died had she received the right
care when she was admitted.
One case I can talk about because it has been documented concerned
Dawn Alexander, a 40-year-old lady. She had a baby, went home,
felt unwell and had a temperature. All this should ring alarm
bellsa post-partum mother with a temperature indicates an
infection. The hospital said, Youve got the flu. Go
home. Theres nothing wrong with you.
But her temperature was 40, her limbs were swollen and she
was shivering. She came back to the hospital the next day but
was sent home again. The next day she returned with a letter from
her GP and was admitted but for the first 24 hours nothing was
done for her.
She called her husband and asked him to get her out of the
hospital. By the time he arrived she was critically ill and was
rushed to Liverpool Hospital by helicopter. By the time her husband
drove to Liverpool with his four children she was dead. I dont
know if Mrs Alexander would have survived but I do know that she
wasnt given the opportunity to live. For three days she
tried to get medical assistance and for three days she was denied
medical assistance.
After a while some of the nurses began to resent me because
Id question their decisions and would press the emergency
bell. Things became increasingly difficult and if I came to the
desk theyd say, Quick, cover up the MET bell. Shes
probably going to press it. They wouldnt speak to
me and friends I had on the ward started saying they couldnt
work with me because the others were making it so hard for them.
I started filling in Incident Forms when people werent
being resuscitated or when a patients blood pressure reached
a level requiring mandatory emergency care and they didnt
get it. I put the forms under the Nurse Unit Managers door
but she said I was making a lot of work for her.
Nurses on the ward started following me around to catch me
breaking rules and they finally found something. I was contacted
by the hospital administration and disciplined for resuscitating
a patient. They said that using a Liddell oxygen bag was not within
the scope of an enrolled nurse and I got a first and final warning
on my employment.
In the meantime, a female patient, one of those being investigated
by the Health Care Complaints Commission (HCCC), died and I reported
it because she was not resuscitated after cardiac arrest.
Id had enough and went to see the Director of Acute Services.
When I told her what had happened, she said, Whoa. How do
you know she wasnt resuscitated? Were you there? I
told her that Id looked at the patients notes and
she said that this breached patient confidentiality. She said
this was very disturbing and shed have to give the matter
some thought. She told me to go back to the Nurse Unit Manager
(NUM).
The NUM said I wasnt fitting in and told me to look for
another job. They started moving me around to give me the message.
I was transferred to Campbelltown Hospital and started coming
in to work feeling ill. They put me into the Intensive Care overflow
ward and the two nurses that had bullied and harassed Vanessa
Bragg were on the same shift. I ended up leaving in tears and
havent been back sinceI couldnt do it any longer.
I started talking with Nola and Vanessa and met Valerie and
Yvonne. We started putting things together and in August 2002
drafted a letter to Ian Southwell, South Western Sydney Area Health
Services head. He didnt reply. Wed all been declined
our workers compensation and knew we couldnt go back
so we decided to go to the Minister for Health.
WSWS: Is it unusual not to get workers compensation
for stress leave?
SM: No. When I went to WorkCover, they said, Youre
not the first one. Everyone knows what youre saying and
you wont be the last. They advised me to put the whole
thing behind me and get another job. Nola and Vanessa were told
the same thing. The nurses union also told Valerie and Yvonne
to give up. The union helped none of us. We had no representation
even though we are financial members.
So, in November 2002 we saw Craig Knowles [then Minister for
Health] and although he launched an investigation straight away
we werent happy with his response.
In December 2002, the Health Department audit section contacted
us and in January 2003, we were interviewed by the HCCC. They
took none of my evidence and didnt want my statement. In
March 2003, the month of the state election, we read the announcement
by Amanda Adrian, head of HCCC, that Campbelltown and Camden Hospitals
had performed to all known procedures and protocols and been cleared
of all charges. That was it for us and we went to radio commentator,
Alan Jones.
WSWS: What do you think will be the outcome of the investigations?
SM: Its a big slanging match at the moment about
who can look the best. The Walker inquiry is an inquiry into an
inquiry and theyre just wasting more money and time. When
colleagues would ring us with further cases, the HCCC would say,
Well, weve got enough, how many more do we need?
At the hospital Id say 80 percent of the people know
that what were doing is right and agree with us. They say,
I wish I had the guts to do what youve done.
WSWS: Youve read our articleSydney
hospital deaths used to boost private healthwhat do
you think of it?
SM: I think the government would be very happy if it
didnt have to run any hospitals. Mr Carr seems to have not
realised that were dealing with peoples lives. Im
also well aware that if there were a Liberal state government
it would be the Labor party helping me, but only for their own
benefit.
Every year the Carr government cut the number of hospital beds.
When I started at Prince Alfred Hospital there were 1,100 beds,
then there were 1,000, 900, 800 and then 700, yet the population
is increasing. There is a new hospital at Campbelltown but 100,000
people are moving into Bringelly, just down the road. The hospital
cant even keep up with what it had five years ago.
I dont believe in private hospitals either. Ive
worked in them. They make money and if a hospital is making money,
its cutting somewhere and its usually staff.
WSWS: What is your situation now? The press has reported
that youve been offered your jobs back and compensation.
SM: We havent been sacked and we havent
resigned. The politicians and health department officials put
out a big smear campaign, saying we all had mental illnesses.
Now a Health Department mediator has told us weve been vindicated
and do we want our jobs back?
Even though my husband and I are one payment off losing our
home I cant go back to nursing. If I saw something a doctor
or nurse shouldnt be doing, Id have to stop and think:
Do I say something and go through the living hell that Ive
been through over the last 18 months, or do I shut up? If
I remained silent, Id be the kind of nurse I dont
want to be.
See Also:
Australia: Deaths
in Sydney hospitals used to boost private health care
[24 December 2003]
Australian government
moves to dismantle Medicare bulk-billing
[2 December 2003]
Nurses quit Australian
hospitals in record numbers
[25 September 2002]
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