A Middlemore Hospital worker was stabbed by a psychotic patient - with DHB leaders warned staff and patient safety is being risked.
Counties Manukau DHB's hospital advisory committee has been briefed on the stabbing in May and the risks to staff and other patients' of the practice of sending "behaviourally disturbed" patients from emergency care to general medicine for non-medical reasons.
READ MORE:
• Auckland City Hospital investigates four deaths of mothers - husband speaks of being kept from hospital under lockdown
• Covid 19 coronavirus: Documents reveal breaches, frustration amidst deadly Rosewood rest home cluster
• How Auckland DHB will cut elective surgery wait times for Māori and Pacific patients
"General medicine is increasingly pressured to absorb these admissions to minimise the impact on patient flow and to mitigate capacity or resourcing constraints in other areas better equipped to appropriately care for these patients," the committee was told in a monthly report by department of medicine leaders.
"These admissions have demonstrated that inappropriate placement into general medicine does not support the patient's best interests and on several occasions has caused harm."