• last year
A former Perth Children's Hospital healthcare worker says the facility's mental health ward remains unsafe and has contradicted the government's account of what happened on the night a 13-year-old patient was raped last year. The ABC can also reveal the hospital was not fully staffed that night, despite claims by the WA Health Minister and Premier.

Category

đŸ“ș
TV
Transcript
00:00 The incident occurred in January last year when a female patient was allegedly raped by a 13-year-old male patient in Perth Children's Hospital's acute mental health ward.
00:11 Do any of the investigations into this incident find that the ward was understaffed on the night this occurred?
00:17 No, staffing levels were as what they should be.
00:22 We've got more than a week in the hospital's case that it wasn't understaffed that night.
00:26 We know it was fully staffed that evening.
00:28 The ABC has seen a document which clearly states in black and white that the ward was down one senior staff member that night.
00:35 A clinical incident review was conducted immediately after the alleged assault.
00:40 That panel concluded that the optimal number of staff on the ward that night would have been eight.
00:45 We know there were seven.
00:47 Because the shift coordinator called in sick, a more junior nurse took their place and as no replacements were available, they had to pick up the nursing patient load themselves.
00:56 The report found that acting shift coordinator lacked adequate experience which may have contributed towards some of the miscommunication on the evening.
01:04 And that insufficient staffing was one of a constellation of factors which combined to contribute towards the incident.
01:11 The ABC has spoken to a former Perth Children's Hospital worker who says junior staff did call security on that night but they didn't stay.
01:19 The worker says staff alerted senior management about safety concerns regarding the male patient prior to the incident but claims they weren't followed up.
01:28 Hello, my name is Aishwarya.
01:30 In April 2021, seven-year-old Aishwarya Ashwath died at the same hospital after waiting almost two hours to be seen by a doctor in the ED.
01:39 At the time, then Premier Mark McGowan told us...
01:42 The emergency department was staffed above its complement. It was staffed above what is normally there.
01:48 But a coronial inquest into her death recommended minimum staffing ratios be introduced at PCH.
01:54 The inquest heard staff were overloaded on the night Aishwarya died.
01:58 Australian Nursing Federation State Secretary Janet Ray says there must be greater transparency.
02:04 This government does not shy away from spin. It doesn't shy away from mixing up the facts to make themselves look better.
02:11 And they're not shy about throwing nurses and midwives under the bus and blaming the little guy when it's a systemic problem.
02:17 In a statement, the WA Health Minister said the ratio of nursing staff to patients that night was 1 to 2.4,
02:23 which was higher than what the union once implemented as the minimum standard.
02:27 .
02:28 .
02:29 [BLANK_AUDIO]

Recommended