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Thin blue line: Now even our police are being held up by state’s hospital ramping crisis

Queensland police are spending up to five hours waiting with mental health patients for them to be admitted to hospitals, the police union says.

 

May 09, 2022, updated May 09, 2022
A man has been charged with murder after a body was found at an industrial site in Hervey Bay.. (AAP Image/Dave Hunt)

A man has been charged with murder after a body was found at an industrial site in Hervey Bay.. (AAP Image/Dave Hunt)

Emergency waiting times and ambulance ramping have been increasing in recent years in Queensland with the problems exacerbated by COVID-19.

Queensland Police Union president Ian Leavers says officers escorting mental health patients to hospital are increasingly being kept waiting for hours.

“Police are completely frustrated,” he told ABC Radio.

“We join policing to protect life and property, not to be sitting in car parks of hospitals waiting to hand over patients. We’re not only seeing ambulances in the car parks of hospitals, it’s full of police cars as well. ”

Leavers said police are not supposed to be kept waiting at hospitals for more than 30 minutes, but sometimes the wait was up to five hours.

He said the capacity crisis at Queensland’s public hospitals was keeping officers off the beat, which was a risk to public safety.

The QPU president said the problem existed right across the state and the government should ease the pressures.

“It’s just getting to the point we obviously need to look at whether it’s understaffing, rostering or what are the actual issues, but it’s an inefficient use of not only police resources,” Leavers said.

Liberal National Party police spokesman Dale Last said the government should immediately address the issue.

He said not only were police being pulled away from the front line, but it was taking a toll on mental health patients forced to wait in police vehicles for hours.

“That’s not conducive to mental health at all, because … in the first place, these people are being transported there because they had mental health issues,” Mr Last said.

“The sooner that they’re seen by a medical practitioner, the better.”

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