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Fatal ambulance delays in Victoria grow to 33 as report finds delays with majority of triple-0 calls - ABC News

An independent investigation has found at least 33 people died after delays with Victoria's triple-0 call taking system.

The Inspector-General for Emergency Management, Tony Pearce, has released two reports into delays in call taking within the state's emergency telephone service, ESTA and the way the organisation handled the pandemic.

Mr Pearce said he found there was an inadequate number of call takers employed by ESTA but also a large number of calls during the pandemic for non-life threatening cases.

Mr Pearce reviewed emergency calls from December 2020 to May 2022.

He said adverse events began to occur from September 2021 and he identified 40 cases of seriously ill and injured patients whose calls were delayed.

Thirty-three of those died.

"It's not possible for me to conclude as to whether or not the call answer delay impacted upon the final outcome for those individuals. Only the coroner can do that," he said. 

"To the families and friends of the people that are involved in these terrible events, I apologise."

"And I apologise if the expectations of the report are not going to meet each individual's desires to know individually what happened for their loved one."

He has recommended a revision of ESTA's long-term funding to ensure it will be adequately resourced in the future and better community education about when to call triple-zero.

Mr Pearce said he found no fault with ESTA call takers and dispatchers who he said also suffering during the unfolding situation.

An open plan office space with people working on computers at ESTA in Ballarat
The Ambulance Union says ESTA should have been better prepared for the pandemic.(ABC Ballarat: Sarah Jane Bell )

His reports noted the number of triple-0 calls almost doubled from an average of around 2,200 a day before the pandemic to nearly 4,000 at the peak of the Omicron surge.

But from September 2021 the time it was taking ESTA to answer emergency calls significantly declined to 67.8 per cent before sliding to its lowest point in January 2022, when it only answered 38 per cent of calls within the five-second target.

Mr Pearce found at times it was more than 10 minutes.

Mr Pearce talks to journalists from a podium.
Mr Pearce said he found "missed opportunities and failings in Victoria's emergency communications system".(ABC News)

"Significant declines in ESTA's emergency ambulance triple-0 answer times were identified from December 2020 with the most significant degradation correlating with increasing peaks during the COVID-19 pandemic surge," Mr Pearce said.

"Ambulance call activity increased beyond historical highs and emergency calls queued for unacceptable lengths."

The Victorian Ambulance Union has previously said understaffing had contributed significantly to what it describes as an alarming number of people being harmed by triple-zero delays.

The Victorian government said paramedics responded to more than 93,000 Code 1 call-outs in January 2022 quarter, breaking the record set in the previous quarter.

It said ESTA's call-taking performance is now at 92.8 per cent of all calls answered within five seconds, exceeding the benchmark for the first time since October 2021.

Minister apologies to grieving families

It said it's invested more than $333 million to meet demand including bringing on more than 400 extra staff and providing more support to frontline workers.

Emergency Services Minister Jaclyn Symes said the state government accepted all the recommendations of the reviews and had already invested more than $333 million to ensure ESTA can meet future increases in calls, including employing more than 400 extra staff.

"During the last two years, we have faced unprecedented demand on our health system and of course our call taking system has not been immune to this," Ms Symes said.

An ambulance parked at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne.
The state government says it has already taken action to improve capacity within ESTA, including hiring hundreds more staff.(ABC News: Michael Barnett)

She again expressed her sympathies to all Victorians who've lost ones during the pandemic.

"This review will be upsetting to many people, particularly those who have lost loved ones but I do want to assure those people, and I've spoken to many of them, that our efforts in this regard is off the back of their stories, their experiences."

"I am, of course, deeply sorry for the loss, your trauma, your grief. It's driven me every day to work very hard to secure the funding from government that ESTA has required to ensure that Victorians have a system they rely on."

Ms Symes paid tribute to ESTA's call-takers who she said were dedicated and committed to "help Victorians get the help they need, when they need it".

In May, the state government announced the triple-0 service would be renamed and its board disbanded because of blow-outs in waiting times for critically ill patients and staff shortages.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFiYy5uZXQuYXUvbmV3cy8yMDIyLTA5LTAzL3ZpY3RvcmlhLXJlcG9ydC1maW5kcy1kZWxheXMtd2l0aC1tYWpvcml0eS1vZi10cmlwbGUtMC1jYWxscy8xMDE0MDMwNDTSAQA?oc=5

2022-09-03 01:19:36Z
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