Earthquake Update 19 – Canterbury District Health Board
EARTHQUAKE UPDATE NINETEEN – CANTERBURY DISTRICT
HEALTH BOARD
Oxygen
If your oxygen supply is faulty, or has been cut off because of power or any other issues and if you are having immediate breathing difficulties, call 111.
If you have an interruption to your power supply you are asked to find an alternative power source if possible.
If you are NOT having immediate difficulty breathing, please direct questions about breathing devices (such as oxygen concentrators and Bi-Pap machines) to Cardio/Respiratory Outreach during work hours - 364 0167.
If the call is not answered, leave a detailed message and the call will be returned as soon as possible. If it is after hours you should call 364 0640.
If your situation changes and you experience breathing difficulties call 111.
You can also ring Healthline on 0800 611 116 to talk with a registered nurse at any time.
All Canterbury District Health
Board buildings – safety
All hospital buildings
have been checked by independent structural engineers. Other
than those which are closed off or have restricted entry
(clearly marked by tape, cones etc.) the buildings have been
assessed as safe to occupy. ‘Green stickers’ are being
placed on the buildings.
Christchurch Hospital
Detailed information on the availability of
Christchurch Hospital services can be found on the
Canterbury DHB website. www.cdhb.govt.nz
General Medical
patients – the Clinical Leadership Teams from both
Christchurch Hospital and The Princess Margaret Hospital
have worked collaboratively and identified Ward 3B at The
Princess Margaret Hospital to temporarily relocate patients
from one of the General Medical wards at Christchurch
Hospital’s Riverside building.
Level four and five of
Riverside block is closed because of water damage sustained
during the earthquake. Some services on those levels four
and five will resume later next week.
All patients
currently presenting at Christchurch Hospital who require
care under General Medicine will be transferred to Ward 23
or Ward 26 at Christchurch Hospital, or to 3B at The
Princess Margaret Hospital for their inpatient
care.
Transferred patients – Canterbury patients
transferred to hospitals in other parts of the country are
to remain there in the interim and this arrangement will be
reviewed towards the end of next week.
Elective
surgery – Although limited elective surgery will
resume on Monday, March 7, there will be some patients who
are still required to have their surgery performed at other
hospitals. Patients will be contacted regarding
arrangements.
Orthopaedic Outpatient Department –
Christchurch Hospital Orthopaedic Outpatient Department
has been open for normal business since last Friday for
patients to come to their fracture follow-up appointments,
as booked, prior to the earthquake. A number of patients are
turning up Bealey Ave 24-hour surgery, where it is already
busy. Patients should come, as arranged, to Christchurch
Hospital Orthopaedic Outpatient Department, unless they have
been notified of a change of appointment. Those who have
missed their appointment, or are unable to attend arranged
appointments need to phone the department on 364
0800.
The Diabetes Centre and Diabetes
Christchurch Society at 550 Hagley Ave is closed. If you
have any diabetes emergencies, please contact your GP in the
first instance. If you are unable to find a GP, limited
medical services are being offered at Cowles Stadium. A
diabetes triage nurse is operating from Christchurch
Hospital and is available Monday to Friday 8.30am to 5pm on
027 4543052. Alternatively call Christchurch Hospital
3640640 during these hours and ask to be put through.
Diabetes test strips and medications are free from your
local chemist until Sunday 6 March. A limited supply of free
meters is available at Cowles Stadium
Parking –
There is disruption to normal parking arrangements at
Christchurch Hospital and alternative parking is available
at Hagley Park.
Patients with appointments at
Christchurch and Women’s Hospital are asked to park at
Hillmorton Hospital and catch the free shuttle which will
take them to the main entrance at Christchurch Women’s
Hospital. Parking at Hillmorton Hospital is free and via the
main entrance on Annex road off Lincoln road, which will be
sign posted. The shuttles between Hillmorton to Christchurch
and Women’s Hospital will run from 8am to 5pm, leaving
Hillmorton on the ½ hour and Christchurch Women’s
Hospital on the hour.
There will not be a pick up at
Christchurch Hospital’s Riverside entrance. All drop-offs
and pick-ups will be from the front entrance at Christchurch
Women’s.
Transport between hospitals – the St
John inter-hospital shuttle will recommence full service on
Monday March 7. Two shuttles as per the normal timetable
will be running between Christchurch, Hillmorton, The
Princess Margaret Hospital and Burwood Hospitals. There may
be delays in arrival times because of road
conditions.
Media are not to access Christchurch
Hospital or staff without permission – ALL media
queries must be directed to the Canterbury DHB Strategic
Communications Team. Please phone (03) 337 7390, or 027 502
7523/ 027 531 4796.
Visitors to hospital – are
reminded to clean their hands with alcohol gel before
entering clinical areas. This is available at the entrance
to all clinical areas.
Lyndhurst Centre – opens
Monday, March 7 and women with appointments will be
contacted by a staff member.
Brithing Units –
Rangiora and Lincoln are open. Burwood is
closed.
Vulnerable People
A 24-hour ‘Transit
Lounge’ has been set up at The Princess Margaret Hospital,
which will triage older vulnerable people in the community
who have high health or disability needs. The Transit
Lounge will provide assessment and coordination of services.
Access to the service is through single point of entry
(SPOE) 337 7765.
The families of all older people
transferred out of the region have ALL been contacted.
Alternative arrangements are being made for children
with disabilities who require respite care. Families are
being contacted.
Meals on Wheels
Meals on
Wheels started on Tuesday March 1, to suburbs where Red
Cross volunteers have safe vehicle access. An attempt has
been made to contact all meal recipients and their next of
kin to establish their meal requirements. We are taking new
referrals especially for vulnerable older people who are
being discharged from hospital or respite care.
Meals
on Wheels in Lincoln, Amberley and Rangiora have had no
interruption to services.
Managing Liquefaction Silt
Dust Risk
To reduce dust, water will be sprayed onto
silt on Christchurch roads. This water may be contaminated
and people should avoid contact with the silt.
Advice
for cleaning shoes and clothes after contact with silt/
liquefaction
• Remove contaminated clothes and
shoes before entering the house
• Wear a
protective face mask and gloves
• Wash items
separately, i.e. not with other clothing or household
items
• Wash hands well, and use sanitiser
before eating, drinking or smoking.
Masks
– high winds create unpleasant dusty conditions in
many areas Masks can be purchased from pharmacies and
hardware stores, and are being distributed from water
tankers (also hand sanitising gel). There is an adequate
supply of masks, as the Pandemic supply has been released.
Health risks – a report rates the
health risk from dust generated from earthquake liquefaction
and sewage contamination as low following last year’s
Christchurch Earthquake on September 4. The Institute of
Environmental Science and Research report says the dust is
largely a nuisance, which due to its small particle size can
be inhaled into the lungs and make respiratory conditions
such as asthma worse. Christchurch public health staff
advise that earthquake generated silt and dust from the
February earthquakes should be treated as potentially
contaminated and the usual precautions should apply when
dealing with it. Anyone exposed to the dust should wash
and dry hands, use hand sanitiser and wear a mask if
susceptible to dust. A copy of the report Liquefaction
Silt - Public Health Risk is available from www.moh.govt.nz. (See separate media
release).
Important public health
information 4 March 2011
• Boil or treat all
water from taps and tankers before drinking, brushing
teeth, or using in food preparation. Bringing water to the
boil is sufficient to kill bugs. If you cannot boil water,
treat it by adding 1 teaspoon of household bleach per 10
litres of water and leave for 30 minutes.
• Waterways are contaminated with untreated
sewage. Avoid contact with rivers, sea water, ponds,
puddles or other surface water. Do not swim, paddle, fish,
or gather shellfish or any other food from oceans and
rivers.
• In many parts of the city
sewerage pipes have broken and untreated sewage has mixed
with liquefaction silt. People should avoid silt if they
can, particularly if they don’t have running water to wash
after contact. If people have to work with silt they should
wear water-proof gloves, gumboots and a dust mask; shower or
wash immediately afterwards; and wash clothes
separately.
• Take care when disposing of human
waste (faeces, poo, vomit etc). Bury it in your garden
or wrap it well in paper or plastic and put it in your red
bin for collection. Wash your hands immediately after
dealing with any human waste.
• Wash
your hands or use hand sanitiser after toileting, and
before and after eating or preparing food. Free hand
sanitizer is available from official water tanker
sites.
• If you get sick move to
somewhere that has running water at a friend’s or
relative’s place. Running water (for hand washing and
toileting) is important in preventing the spread of
illness.
• If you are sick try to limit contact with other people, do not go to work and do not prepare food for anyone. The majority of GPs in Christchurch are now open to treat minor injury or illness. Dial 111 for emergency medical attention.
• Take extreme care with food – particularly
with food that should be refrigerated. Dispose of smelly,
slimy, mouldy or discoloured food immediately. Do not
refreeze food once power returns.
Gastroenteritis
There have been 56
notifications of gastroenteritis since February 27. This is
consistent with the number of notifications for this time of
year. The incidence of gastroenteritis remains sporadic,
with no large clusters indicating an outbreak. However, the
number of cases may be under reported and people with
symptoms are urged to seek medical advice.
Do not swim
in rivers and beaches where raw sewage may be present.
Locations include all beaches between the Waimakariri River
and Lyttelton Harbour. The affected beaches include:
•
Spencer Beach
• Waimairi Beach
•
North Beach
• New Brighton Beach
•
South Brighton Beach
• Christchurch
Estuary
• The beaches at Sumner and
Scarborough
• Taylor’s Mistake Beach
•
All beaches in Lyttelton Harbour.
Water
Water has been restored to 78 percent of
households. Tankers are delivering water to areas without
supply. You can also collect hand sanitiser, health
information and facemasks from the tankers.
The city’s
water supply remains chlorinated. Over 1000 water tests
have been carried out, but 30 have still failed so it’s
important that you continue to boil drinking water.
Chlorination will cease once repairs have been completed,
and the water supply is safe.
Dialysis
A
free-phone dialysis helpline is available on 0800 881919.
Any person who needs dialysis in the metropolitan area of
Christchurch and is at risk has been moved to the North
Island. In the future chlorination may be a potential issue
for people on dialysis, however, it is very manageable as
filtration can be fitted to the dialysis machine. If staff
have any concerns about dialysis patients they can contact
Adrian Buttimore, Dialysis Services Manager at Christchurch
Hospital
Community Medical Centre, Cowles Stadium,
Pages Road
The Australian Army Field Hospital staff
who are operating the Community Medical Centre at Cowles
Stadium have seen more than 600 patients since they set up
the self-contained facility last week. The staff will be
returning to Australia over the weekend and the surrounding
General Practices are sufficiently restored to fully take up
the medical case-load from Saturday.
The facility will
remain on site for several more weeks to house health and
community support services that are currently either
‘homeless’ but where there is a significant local need.
The mobile community dental clinic will remain there as will
physiotherapy services and the 10am and 5pm psychological
support/grief counselling services. Plunket will move to
alternate premises next week.
Plunket
Updated information on services will
be communicated regularly, and can also be found on
Plunket’s website www.plunket.org.nz and Canterbury
Plunket Facebook.
Free Urgent Medical Treatment
Extended
If you are unwell, visit your General
Practice team. If your health issue is earthquake related,
your visit may be free. This arrangement is in place until
the end of Sunday 13 March.
This is being funded by the
South Island DHBs.
The urgent medical care offer is also being generously matched by major North Island general practice networks Procare in Auckland, Wellington's Compass and the Midlands Health Network (covering Taranaki, Waikato, some of Lakes and Tairawhiti). Christchurch evacuees in the North Island should ring first to check the initiative is being offered at their nearest practice.
In recognition
of GPs support, DHBs are waiving the usual deduction on
Canterbury practices when their patients are treated
elsewhere until March 13.
General Practices and
Pharmacies
Ninety four percent of General Practice
Teams in Christchurch are now open, and 93 percent of
pharmacies are open. Demand for pharmacy services has been
high with up to 900 prescriptions a day being processed in
some areas.
To find out whether your general practice
team (GP/ Doctor) or local pharmacy is open, ring them
first.If your general practice phone number is not working
or you do not have a usual general practice, ring 365
7777.
For emergencies and life threatening conditions
ring 111.
AMOS
The ‘A Message Of Support’
(www.AMOS.org.nz) website has been established with the help
of Datam and NZ Post, where messages of support can be
posted for health workers involved in the response to the
Christchurch Earthquake.
The website is a response to
many requests from health professionals and others from all
over the world wanting to send messages of support to those
at the frontline. Many people have benefitted directly from
the efforts of staff and often want a way to say thank
you.
The site will carry stories about the work people
are doing and visitors can post messages up to 350
characters long on a general site or address it to specific
areas such as the Intensive Care Unit or the Emergency
Department.
Through this site, people can also leave
messages for other agencies such as Police, Fire, Red Cross
and Civil Defence.
Helplines
ACC - people wanting to know what their
entitlements are: 0800 101 996
Healthline - health advice 24-hours a day,
seven days a week 0800 611 116
Red Cross-
0800 733 276. People who have relocated outside of
Christchurch are urged to contact the Red
Cross.
Urgent mental health advice Psychiatric
Emergency Service on 03 3640 482 or 0800 920
092
Urgent Dental Care if you can’t contact
your own dentist 335 4260. After hours 027 683
0679
Meals on wheels 337 7797
Vulnerable
older people that urgently require assistance because of
health or disability needs should contact Older Persons
Health on 337 7765 for assessment and
advice
Relocated older people – if you are
unable to contact their usual aged residential care provider
to confirm their location, please phone 337 8937 for
information.
Dialysis helpline 0800
881919.
Ambulance 111
Pegasus 24-hour
medical centre in Bealey Avenue – 365 7777
Water collection locations http://canterburyearthquake.org.nz/water-tanker-timetable-for-deliveries/
Christchurch Hospital Services Canterbury DHB website www.cdhb.govt.nz
Counselling
and interpreter services
A specialist counselling
service from Refugees as Survivors (RAS) is now operating
through the Primary Health Organisations (PHOs). This team
of highly experienced people is available to any General
Practice where trauma issues exist amongst those from
refugee and migrant backgrounds.
Apart from the Language
Line number available to General Practices, a second number
has now been made available by the Department of Ethnic
Affairs. This number 0800 656 656 is available to ALL
organisations and individuals free-of-charge. Simply dial
the number and ask for the language required. There may be
delays due to high volumes.
For face-to-face interpreters
these are available to all our General Practices. Telephone
0800 INTERPRET (468 37738)to arrange this. Please try and
book ahead as it is seldom possible to arrange an
interpreter at short notice
For those requiring
face-to-face interpreters outside of general practice,
contact Wayne Reid, Ethnic Liaison Manager, Partnership
Health Canterbury, 56 Shirley Rd, Shirley
Canterbury
Health Laboratories
Canterbury Health Laboratories
are fully operational including their collection rooms at
CHL (opposite main hospital entrance), TPMH and Burwood. CHL
collection rooms will also be open on Saturday morning 0800
– 1100 hours. Lab volumes are around 123 percent of
normal.
Check on your neighbours and keep in touch
with family and friends
At times like this it’s
important to look out for elderly neighbours and others who
live alone.
Welfare Centres (Ministry of
Social Development (MSD)
From tonight (Friday, March
4), welfare is being focused on the hardest hit areas,
particularly in the Eastern suburbs. Pioneer Stadium, 75
Lyttelton Street, Spreydon will continue as the residential
welfare centre, with people who need overnight accommodation
being transferred there if required.
During weekend, five
Recovery Assessment and Information Centres (RAICs) will be
established. Locations are to be confirmed later tonight.
RAICs will be a one-stop-shop where people can access
information about any services they may require.
For
further information please go to: http://www.msd.govt.nz/emergency/index.html
Toilets
for Eastern Suburbs
The delivery of the chemical toilets is being hampered by heavy traffic on the road. Residents are asked to refrain from any non-essential travel.
Work and Income offices People
can also visit these Work and Income offices between 9am and
5pm weekdays and 9am to 4pm on weekends.
• New
Brighton, 26 Beresford Street
• Hornby, 25
Shands Road
• Riccarton, 76 Riccarton
Road
• Rangiora, Corner of Good and Blake
Street
• Kaiapoi Community Link, Unit 9 The
Crossings, 77 Hilton Street
• Ashburton
Community Link, Corner of Cass and Moore Street
•
Shirley, 203-205 Hills Road
Emotional responses to
the recent crisis
It’s normal to be feeling very
stressed at the moment. Everyone is affected in different
ways. Some of us may feel very anxious or low in spirits.
Some of us may feel it’s hard to function. If you are
worried about yourself or a family member, please talk to
someone in your general practice team. They can call on a
wide range of mental health and counselling services, and
more counsellors are being brought in to
help.
Coping strategies - stress and anxiety
The Ministry of Health has created a series of fact
sheets with advice and coping strategies for people
experiencing stress or anxiety in the wake of this week's
tragedy. These can be found on the Ministry's website - www.moh.govt.nz - under the banner
headline ‘Christchurch Earthquake’
Mental
Health Nurses are available to provide support in the
community. Please phone your GP Team for
information.
ENDS