A senior doctor has accused Te Whatu Ora - Health New Zealand of a 鈥渃onspiracy鈥 to avoid publicly disclosing unsafe radiology practices that harmed multiple patients, the聽Herald聽can reveal.
In an extraordinary step, Dr Bryan Wolf, a consultant radiologist in Hawke鈥檚 Bay, has asked the Ombudsman to investigate what he describes as the national health authority鈥檚 failure to inform the public about significant safety risks in the radiology service where he is a senior medical officer.
罢丑别听Herald聽has obtained two letters Wolf sent to Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier in July in which he alleged that Te Whatu Ora withheld important information despite his insistence it be made public and questioned its commitment to accountability.
鈥淚 believe this can now reasonably be labelled a conspiracy to defraud the general public of their knowledge and health,鈥 he wrote in one of the letters, which have not previously been reported.
Contact the reporter at聽[email protected].
Late last year, Wolf alerted Te Whatu Ora鈥檚 board and national leadership to problems he alleged put patients and employees at risk of 鈥減ermanent, life-altering physical, emotional, psychological, cultural and professional harm鈥, according to his letters to the Ombudsman.
In response, Te Whatu Ora commissioned a review of Hawke鈥檚 Bay鈥檚 radiology department which was completed in April. According to people who have seen their report, the reviewers found long-standing flaws in systems and a culture that endangered patients and left staff feeling isolated and helpless.
At the centre was an IT system so defective that radiology reports were not delivered to doctors who requested them and clinicians were forced to adopt risky workarounds.
The review raises wider questions about the quality of patient care, staffing levels, technology systems, governance and accountability in hospitals at a time when New Zealand鈥檚 health sector is under enormous strain, one of the sources said.
But the report was not made public after it was completed, and Te Whatu Ora refused to release it when a journalist at RNZ requested the document under the Official Information Act in May, on the grounds that disclosure would identify a whistleblower 鈥 Wolf.
Wolf was infuriated by the decision not to release the report. In one of his letters to the Ombudsman, he said he made it clear to the reviewers and Te Whatu Ora executives that he wanted the public to know about the safety issues and did not expect his identity to be protected.
鈥淏eyond any reasonable doubt, the Te Whatu Ora board and executive leadership team were exhaustively and intimately informed of my consent to open disclosure and my desire for institutional transparency,鈥 Wolf told the Ombudsman.
Wolf described Te Whatu Ora鈥檚 decision to withhold the report as 鈥済rossly oppositional to the public鈥檚 interest鈥 and its use of whistleblower-protection laws to justify non-disclosure as 鈥渆gregious鈥.
鈥淭his OIA refusal furthers my written concerns that Te Whatu Ora is an organisation expecting to be unaccountable to the public and external oversight agencies,鈥 he wrote to Boshier.
Dr Bryan Wolf, a consultant radiologist in Hawke鈥檚 Bay, has asked the Ombudsman to investigate what he describes as the national health authority鈥檚 failure to inform the public about significant safety risks in the radiology service where he is a senior medical officer.
Wolf declined to comment for this article. The Ombudsman鈥檚 office had not responded to a request for comment at the time of publication.
After the聽Herald聽contacted Te Whatu Ora about Wolf鈥檚 allegations last week, the authority reconsidered its decision to withhold the report. A spokesperson said it is now preparing to make the document public 鈥渁s soon as we can鈥.
Richard Sullivan, Te Whatu Ora鈥檚 chief clinical officer, told the聽Herald聽there had not been a deliberate attempt to conceal unsafe practices from the public and that Te Whatu Ora had followed legal advice on refusing RNZ鈥檚 OIA request.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to hide anything,鈥 Sullivan said.
Sullivan praised Wolf for alerting national leadership to the safety problems. 鈥淲e should be thanking Bryan. He saw some clinical issues, he raised concerns. And that was taken seriously.鈥
Sullivan said Te Whatu Ora is working through 18 recommendations made by the reviewers, including conducting a thorough investigation of the harm patients suffered because of the unsafe practices. Other actions it is taking to improve the service include technical upgrades, improved operating procedures and a new CT scanner.
Sullivan said he has been assured Hawke鈥檚 Bay鈥檚 radiology systems are now 鈥渟afe and stable鈥, although 鈥渨e have got a long way to go鈥 before they are optimal. He was confident other hospitals have not experienced the same level of harm because of these problems.
Wolf was not the first person to raise the alarm about defective systems in hospital radiology services.
In September last year, an official at Te Whatu Ora circulated a memo identifying 鈥渁larming鈥 systemic problems in hospitals in the lower North Island.
These included scan results not being sent to doctors who requested them, life-threatening conditions being missed because scans of different body parts were not linked, and radiology staff being so 鈥渏aded鈥 by bad systems that they stopped reporting problems to their superiors.
鈥淚n working through this paper, I have been alarmed at the clinical risk inherent in the system, the acceptance of such risk in the region and extremely laborious mitigation processes districts are willing to undertake to try to mitigate these,鈥 the memo鈥檚 author said. 鈥淭hey are not raised anymore and simply accepted.鈥
According to the memo, which was first reported by RNZ last September, these dangerous practices were common across the region and had a high chance of 鈥減atient death or life-changing delay to treatment鈥.
Soon after that memo was circulated, Wolf began raising his own concerns to Te Whatu Ora鈥檚 leadership.
In one of his letters to the Ombudsman, Wolf said Te Whatu Ora had forced him into a position where he had no choice but to take his concerns outside the organisation. He said he felt betrayed by his employer and was worried about the professional consequences of speaking out.
Sullivan told the聽Herald: 鈥淐learly, Bryan is very distressed over this, and that鈥檚 not okay. None of our staff should feel that way. None of our staff should feel that they need to write to everybody to be heard.鈥 Sullivan had a meeting with Wolf to discuss his concerns on Friday.
Wolf has also alerted Health Minister Dr Ayesha Verrall鈥檚 office to the problems he identified.
In a statement, Verrall said: 鈥淚 have been briefed by my officials on safety concerns raised regarding the Hawke鈥檚 Bay radiology department, including the external review report. I expect Te Whatu Ora to implement the report鈥檚 findings in full.鈥
Alex Spence is a senior investigative journalist based in Auckland. Before joining the聽Herald, he spent 17 years in London where he worked for The听罢颈尘别蝉, Politico, and BuzzFeed 九一星空无限.
HELP US INVESTIGATE
罢丑别听Herald聽will continue reporting on the impact of the staffing crisis in New Zealand鈥檚 hospitals and we need your help. Do you have information on this topic? Have you or someone you know missed out on treatment because of these problems? Are you a hospital employee working under difficult conditions? Do you have documents that can help us shed light on these issues?
We want to speak to as many people as possible who have experience in the system, to ensure our reporting is thorough and accurate. You can reach the Investigations Editor Alex Spence by email ([email protected]), secure Signal messaging (0272358834), or post (罢丑别听New Zealand Herald, Private Bag 92198, Victoria St West, Auckland CBD 1142). We can鈥檛 reply to all submissions because of the volume we receive. We will not publish your name or identify you as a source unless you want us to.
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