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Friday, April 19, 2024

Code Brown ordered for Victorian hospitals

A ‘Pandemic Code Brown’ will be implemented across all public metropolitan and major regional hospitals to help the health sector to better manage the COVID-19 Omicron outbreak, Victoria’s Health Minister announced today.

Like many around the world, Victoria’s health system is juggling workforce shortages because of staff in isolation, a vast number of coronavirus patients requiring hospitalisation, and ongoing treatment for patients with urgent and emergency needs, said Acting Minister for Health, James Merlino.

“With our health services asking for further assistance to manage the emergency situation, the Department of Health is calling a coordinated Pandemic Code Brown – with affected public hospitals activating their Code Brown plans by midday on Wednesday, 19 January 2022,” he said.

“Our hardworking health workers on the front-line are caring for record numbers of coronavirus patients every day – this is the best way to ensure our hospitals can continue to safely care for those that need it most.

“Our health services will have to make some hard decisions over the next few weeks to manage increasing demand and I thank every single one of them for making the tough calls necessary to help as many Victorians as they can.”

Changes health services can implement under the Code Brown include configuring services to free up more staff, including the delivery of outpatient services outside the hospital, and the rapid offload of ambulance patients at emergency departments to get paramedics back on the road as soon as possible. Hospitals may also choose to redeploy staff to work in areas of highest clinical priority, the Minister said.

In addition to hospitals in Metropolitan Melbourne, the Code Brown will be implemented at Barwon Health, Grampians Health, Bendigo Health, Goulburn Valley Health, Albury Wodonga Health and Latrobe Regional Hospital.

A coordinated approach to activating Code Brown response plans is necessary to help health services – including Ambulance Victoria – work together rather than in isolation, in the face of overwhelming demand, Mr Merlino said.

“Health services and the health workforce will continue to have responsibility for clinical and operational decisions that affect patients and their communities. This includes decisions around how to manage internal patient flow within a health service as well as the assessment, treatment and referral of patients,” he said.

“Additionally, there will be an expansion of covid streaming sites to increase the number of hospitals caring for coronavirus patients – easing the pressure at hospitals currently handling the most patients.”

The Department of Health is also set to establish a new Health Service Response Centre which will help hospitals coordinate patient flow, distribute activity and support decisions around service reconfiguration – such as suspending some activity or moving to home-based care, the Minister said.

The Pandemic Code Brown is expected to last four to six weeks and health officials will monitor the situation to determine when it’s safe to begin winding down arrangements.

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