East Care Group Chief Executive Gordon Armstrong announced today that East Care Accident and Medical was ending the
overnight service it has been running in Counties Manukau for more than 20 years.
“This is a move we have taken with enormous regret,” Mr Armstrong said. “We know better than most that there is a
significant need for the service we have been offering and that it’s highly prized within the community. But we have
found ourselves increasingly caught between a rock and a hard place, to the point where we can no longer provide a safe
and high-quality overnight operation.”
East Care initiated its overnight (after 11pm) service 24 years ago because it could see that rapid population growth
and an aging demographic were only going to increase the urgency of the need for overnight care within the local
community. Although the service got off the ground without DHB or any other external funding, in 2014 Counties Manukau
Health agreed to step up with funding to help support the service as part of a regional initiative to provide access to
overnight care and to maintain financially viability in the face of increasing healthcare costs.
In 2018, however, the DHB reversed course. Instead of delivering to their stated intention of having two funded
overnight services in Counties Manukau, it elected that none would be DHB funded. This meant that while East Care could
produce independent research showing its clinic was the highest volume provider of overnight primary care in Auckland
(33% of all overnight urgent presentations in the last quarter), it found itself the only Auckland clinic running a 24/7
service without any DHB subsidy
Even with the loss of the funding, East Care determined that it had a responsibility to continue the overnight clinic
for as long as it reasonably could, in the interests of patient wellbeing. In the interim, although it was no longer
funding the service, Counties Manukau Health relied heavily on East Care both as a provider of 24/7 primary care
services and to provide community Covid-19 swabbing.
“We took the attitude that our patients need us, so we had to keep sucking it up,” Mr Armstrong said.
“From the beginning, this was a loss-making service. With the advent of DHB funding five or six years ago, we found we
could manage. But the situation we’re in now is not just unfair, it’s unsustainable. To expect a loss-making service,
however strong the need for it may be, to stay open just because we feel it’s the right thing to do, even as the losses
keep mounting, is an argument that has stopped making sense. And, frankly, as a GP-owned organisation we don’t have the
economies of scale of a larger, funded provider. We do however maintain the ongoing ability to service patients from 7am
to 11pm, just not overnight.”
In November 2020, patient volumes began to increase significantly at East Care and all other primary care clinics across
the region. This led to major operational pressure, staff burn out, long wait times and a spike in patient
cancellations.
The worsening outlook was exacerbated earlier in December, when a doctor employed at East Care was effectively ‘poached’
by a funded overnight provider, who were able to offer higher hourly rates as a result of their being subsidised for
their overnight service. Here was a situation where a subsidised entity was able to outbid an unsubsidised clinic for
precious – and scarce – resource.
“The writing seemed to be on the wall,” said Mr Armstrong. “Then, on Monday of last week (December 7th), the Clinical
Director and I met with our doctors. They graphically described to us the burn-out they were experiencing, the high
volumes of patients they were seeing and they talked to us about what we could all identify as a spiralling clinical
risk,” Mr Armstrong said.
“That night, in fact, our (contractor) overnight doctor experienced just such very high volumes, long wait times, an
unacceptable level of stress and understandably frustrated patients. At 10.30am the next morning, she advised East
Care’s Clinical Director that she wasn’t prepared to work overnight again in those conditions. The Clinical Director
took the view that increasing resource pressure would lead inevitably to more staff being unable to cope, putting
further pressure on the clinic and its staff.
“At this point, we were no longer simply considering a commercial equation. We were confronting a major ethical issue.
Given the now clear resourcing issues and high risk to clinical and patient safety, the Board of Directors felt it had
no option other than to close the service down from December 18th.
“The imminent closure of the East Care overnight service brings to an end over 20 years of 24-hour, 365 days a year care
for our community. It’s not a decision we’d ever have made voluntarily. We feel coerced by the clinical safety issues we
are facing and a highly inequitable funding environment.
“Since we can no longer provide a high quality and clinically safe overnight service, we have no option but to close
between 11pm and 7am every day. East Care remains committed to the East Auckland community and is still the first choice
for high quality urgent care. We will still be open from 7am until 11pm every day, including weekends and all public
holidays. We remain committed to providing the highest quality care to the east and south Auckland communities in the
long term.”