By Ruth Hill of聽
It looks set to be a not-so-merry Covidy Christmas for many people, with one modeller warning one-in-20 could be infected during the height of the festive season.
However, because hospital admissions usually lag by a couple of weeks, the early new year threatens to be the real crunch time for the health system.
Taup艒 Hospital emergency doctor Jeremy Webber said Covid-19 had beaten the holiday hordes to town.
鈥淟ast weekend, for example, I saw more Covid-positive patients than I saw in those first waves a few months ago.
Holidaymakers are streaming into Taup艒 for the summer break. Photo / Supplied, File
鈥淥n top of that, we know we鈥檝e got a lot of under-reporting, so we鈥檙e getting a lot more Covid cases than we鈥檙e getting data on.鈥
Webber, who is also the clinical director of the rural health network Hauora Taiwhenua, said unlike big city hospitals, smaller centres had no backup if one or two staff went off sick.
聽鈥淲e鈥檝e got a small health workforce that has struggled to date to meet the status quo, then you add in the holidaymakers and it really does put a strain on our health system.鈥
People could help keep the pressure off by sorting out routine prescriptions and preparing for minor ailments before going on holiday, and 鈥渟aving the emergency department for emergencies鈥.
Cases are announced a day after they are reported, chart shows reported dates. Source: Ministry of Health via RNZ
鈥淎lso, just heed the usual protections, handwashing, masks, staying home if you鈥檙e sick.鈥
College for Emergency Medicine chair Kate Allan agreed holiday hotspots were most vulnerable.
鈥淚f you think of the Coromandel, Thames, Northland, Queenstown, Wanaka - the populations of those places booms at this time of year.
鈥淪o those hospitals are under significant pressure, and if they鈥檙e already understaffed, that creates additional issues.鈥
Doctors and nurses were not immune to those same viruses circulating, which were making more holes in rosters, she said.
Last week Dunedin Hospital was forced to close a surgical ward to visitors after patients were exposed to Covid-19.
Nurses Organisation president Anne Daniels, an ED nurse in Dunedin, said hospitals nationwide were chronically understaffed and staff were already plugging too many gaps.
New Zealand Nurses Organisation president Anne Daniels. Photo / Gregor Richardson, File
鈥淎nd then you have sickness on top of that. So with the Covid numbers rising, it鈥檚 putting real pressure on the staff that do get to go to work.
鈥淢any of them are working huge extra hours, over-time, coming in on their days off, to support ...聽迟谤测听and support - safe care.鈥
Hospitals were struggling with so-called 鈥渂ed block鈥, with some patients waiting up to 24 hours in the emergency department to be admitted to hospital because there were no beds free, she said.
Co-lead of the Network Contagion Modelling programme at Auckland University, Dion O鈥橬eale, said many people who had 鈥渨orked hard to avoid the virus鈥 were now getting infected.
鈥淏efore when they got on a bus in a mask, there were lots of other people wearing masks, so they are more vulnerable now.
鈥淎nd a lot of the time, the reason those people were trying to avoid infection is because they have some underlying health condition, which they know makes them more susceptible to serious illness.
鈥淪o this time around, even though the pathogen might not be worse, the health impacts could be worse.鈥
Dion O'Neale. Photo / Supplied via Otago Daily Times
There were still 鈥渉uge amounts of uncertainty鈥 in the modelling, with fickle weather and people鈥檚 behaviour the great unknowns, O鈥橬eale said.
However, it was possible that one in 20 people could have Covid-19 in the week of Christmas.
鈥淏etween 30 to 40 per cent of infections are asymptomatic, so it鈥檚 a good idea to do a RAT [rapid antigen test] before you go to a large social event or visit more vulnerable people.鈥
Te Whatu Ora鈥檚 national director of hospital and specialist services, Fionnagh Dougan, said there were national and local plans in place to support services over the summer holiday period.
鈥淎dditional response capacity for surges has also been a focus for hospital teams.
Te Whatu Ora national director of hospital and specialist services, Fionnagh Dougan. Photo / Supplied
鈥淭hese rosters take into account a possible surge in hospitalisations due to Covid, but also other health events in hotspots that receive a large amount of tourists and festival-goers.鈥
Non-urgent care like elective procedures and specialist appointments were typically not scheduled at this time, although emergency surgery and cancer treatment would continue throughout the holiday period.
With the newly 鈥渏oined up health system鈥, it would be easier to move resources around to regions that needed support, Dougan said.
Allan said New Zealanders could do their bit to not over-burden the health system by drinking in moderation, not taking drugs and driving safely.
鈥淎nd be careful with your new toys and that will hopefully prevent you having a bad day on Christmas and New Year and needing to come to the emergency department.鈥
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