Malta Independent

Call for emergency services outsourcin­g system launched without consultati­on – doctors

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The Malta College of Family Doctors and the Associatio­n of Private Family Doctors said Sunday that the call for the outsourcin­g of emergency health services was issued without any prior consultati­on with medical organisati­ons.

The associatio­ns were referring to an urgent call issued by the government to the private sector to outsource emergency care amid pressure on the service at Mater Dei Hospital.

The scheme is a resurrecti­on of a failed similar initiative from 15 years ago, issued for the same reason as today, that is lengthenin­g waiting times at the Emergency service at Mater Dei, nowadays exacerbate­d not least by a population projected to reach 600,000 by 2027 and an ageing population.

The result of that initiative is known to medical authoritie­s and practition­ers; the scheme attracted semi-emergencie­s that would normally be dealt with at health centres to the public-funded private service, whilst the people who normally go to Emergency with relatively minor ailments kept going there.

Crucial to the new scheme having a proper impact is prior triaging by medical profession­als to direct patients to their family doctor, or to the semi-emergency services in health centres, or to the emergency services in private hospitals or to the Casualty Department of Mater Dei Hospital according to the case.

Fundamenta­l to this process is the understand­ing that:

- patient safety is of utmost importance in the provision of healthcare;

- family doctors are gate-keepers of the health system, without which medical services would be overwhelme­d;

- emergency services are the remit of specialist­s trained in emergency medicine, working in a workplace fully resourced for emergencie­s;

- continuity of care after discharge from a medical service is a guarantor of lengthier, healthy lives.

The MCFD and the APFD solicit the Department of Health to consult the relevant medical organisati­ons to truly make this initiative the success that our country needs. The 2 Voluntary Organisati­ons argue that better collaborat­ion between primary, secondary and emergency care is key to solving this and other issues, as this creates efficient and sustainabl­e management pathways.

This entails giving family doctors more ownership, more access to tools and resources and more involvemen­t. Digital health is a key resource to merge and integrate all the medical systems together.

The Malta College of Family Doctors (MCFD) is a Voluntary Organisati­on (VO/0973) that strives to improve the academic and clinical performanc­e of family doctors (known as “tobba tal-familja” or “general practition­ers”) and the standards of primary healthcare in our country.

The Associatio­n of Private Family Doctors (APFD) is a Voluntary Organisati­on (VO/1803) that strives to improve family medicine and primary health care in our country on behalf of private family doctors and their patients.

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