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Should Indigenous patients get faster emergency care than others? This hospital is changing the rules

Health & Wellness

Should Indigenous patients get faster emergency care than others? This hospital is changing the rules

  • Maan
  • By Maan
1761629178043.png Should Indigenous patients get faster emergency care than others? This hospital is changing the rules
Faster care for Indigenous patients: fairness or favouritism? Image source: St Vincent’s Hospital

When you’re sitting in an emergency department, every tick of the clock feels like an eternity.



But what if your wait wasn’t just determined by your symptoms—but by decades of inequality embedded deep in the healthcare system?



One Melbourne hospital has taken a bold step to change that, sparking both praise and outrage across the country.




St Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne has introduced a groundbreaking policy ensuring Indigenous patients are seen within 30 minutes of arrival—a move designed to close long-standing healthcare gaps but one that’s become a lightning rod for political debate.



The hospital, which treats more First Nations patients than any other in Victoria—around 5 per cent of all presentations—introduced the rule in April 2024.



Under the new system, Indigenous patients automatically receive a minimum category-three triage, meaning they must be seen within half an hour.




Understanding Triage



  • Emergency departments rank patients by urgency, from Category 1 (immediate treatment) to Category 5 (seen within two hours).

  • Category 3 patients are meant to be seen within 30 minutes, while Category 4 and 5 patients wait one to two hours respectively.




Crucially, the policy doesn’t let Indigenous patients skip ahead of more critical cases—it simply ensures their care isn’t delayed beyond that 30-minute mark.




'Research conducted in St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne's ED showed First Nations patients were, on average, waiting longer to be seen compared to non-Indigenous patients.'

St Vincent's Hospital spokesperson




Nationally, data suggests Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians have similar emergency wait times—typically between 18 and 20 minutes in recent years.



But St Vincent’s decision wasn’t based solely on averages—it was about tackling deeper, systemic problems in healthcare access.



Indigenous Australians attend emergency departments roughly twice as often as non-Indigenous Australians—25 visits per 1,000 people compared to 13 per 1,000.



This higher rate is often linked to limited access to primary healthcare, especially in rural and regional communities.



Even more concerning, Indigenous Australians leave hospital against medical advice at rates up to 30 times higher than non-Indigenous people—especially Aboriginal men aged 25 to 44.



Experts believe this is connected to past negative experiences and ongoing cultural safety issues in the healthcare system.



Research from St Vincent’s showed that when Indigenous patients were seen within an hour, they were more likely to remain engaged with their treatment.



This finding supports national research showing that having Indigenous Liaison Officers and Aboriginal Health Workers in hospitals improves patient outcomes and reduces early discharges.



Healthcare experts also stress that consistent triage practices are vital for fair treatment and that hospitals should regularly audit triage scores across populations to ensure equity.




However, the new policy has not been without controversy.



Victoria’s Shadow Health Minister Georgie Crozier called it ‘discrimination’, arguing that ‘triaging of patients should be done on medical need, not based on the colour of your skin.’



Critics see it as unfair preferential treatment, but supporters point out that it doesn’t bypass medical urgency—it simply corrects systemic delays that previously left Indigenous patients waiting longer.



The debate comes as Victoria prepares to implement Australia’s first state treaty legislation, with some opponents linking the hospital’s move to broader treaty discussions, though health experts note that equity initiatives like this have been developing for years.




Understanding triage categories


Category 1: Immediate (resuscitation needed)


Category 2: Within 10 minutes (emergency)


Category 3: Within 30 minutes (urgent)


Category 4: Within 60 minutes (semi-urgent)


Category 5: Within 120 minutes (non-urgent)


The St Vincent's policy ensures Indigenous patients receive Category 3 status minimum, but doesn't override higher urgency categories based on clinical need.




Beyond the headlines, the policy reflects a stark truth—Indigenous Australians face preventable hospitalisations at nearly three times the rate of other Australians.



St Vincent’s says the approach aligns with national safety and cultural standards under the Closing the Gap framework, which calls for culturally safe healthcare practices.



The hospital reports that since the policy’s rollout, waiting times between Indigenous and non-Indigenous patients have become nearly identical, without affecting overall emergency department flow.




The controversy highlights a deeper question—what does true healthcare equity look like?



While critics frame the policy as unfair, advocates say it’s a necessary correction to historical disadvantages.



Emergency medicine training now includes modules on bias in triage and cultural considerations, acknowledging that equity sometimes requires targeted approaches for different groups.



St Vincent’s has even received a Victorian Public Healthcare Award for the initiative, recognising that ‘First Nations patients are now seen more promptly than non-Indigenous patients’—a milestone supporters argue is both overdue and essential.




The bigger picture on Indigenous emergency care



  • Indigenous Australians use EDs twice as often as other Australians

  • National wait times are similar, but local variations exist

  • Higher rates of leaving treatment early suggest engagement issues

  • Cultural safety measures can improve healthcare outcomes

  • The policy aims to address specific barriers, not override clinical priorities




What This Means For You


St Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne now guarantees that Indigenous patients will be seen within 30 minutes, a policy introduced to address long-standing healthcare inequities.


While critics have labelled the move as discriminatory, experts emphasise that it is designed to ensure fair access rather than give preferential treatment.


Early data suggests the policy has improved patient engagement without negatively affecting other patients.


For everyday Australians, this highlights how targeted policies can reshape healthcare experiences and prompts reflection on how equity measures might affect the broader community, including how we expect care to be delivered in our local hospitals.




If you’re interested in seeing how hospital wait times can affect real patients, there’s another story that highlights this issue in a striking way.



It details a patient’s two-hour ordeal in an emergency department, revealing how systemic delays can create stressful and potentially dangerous situations.



Reading this story can provide more context on why policies aimed at reducing wait times, like the one at St Vincent’s, are so important.



Read more: ‘Degrading and stressful’: Patient's two-hour hospital ordeal reveals healthcare system flaw





Can targeted healthcare policies truly close long-standing gaps—or will they always stir controversy in a system built on 'equal treatment' that hasn’t always been equal in practice?

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Hhaving worked in the Emergency Department of a large Sydney teaching hospital, I'd really love to be shown proof that indigenous people have been at a disadvantage when visiting an emergency department for treatment. All patients are triaged, regardless of skin colour, and seen in turn.

In my view, this is overt racism, accompanied by a pathetic attempt to virtue signal on the part of St Vincents Hospital. Racism should play no part in healthcare.
 
Everyone should be triaged the same regardless of ethnicity , singling out one race for faster care is a recipe for disaster and unpatriotic
 
Oh for... I'll probably get flamed for this, but why are so many services duplicated? Put the money towards ONE for ALL, and stop the duplication! *SIGH*
 
Oh for... I'll probably get flamed for this, but why are so many services duplicated? Put the money towards ONE for ALL, and stop the duplication! *SIGH*
??? Not sure what you are saying 🤔
 
I have never heard that indigenous people are pushed back in line.
I believe everyone gets seen when its their turn regardless of what colour or race you are.

Now if indigenous people are seen before people who were waiting in line first then that is racist.

It's time everyone is treated equally regardless who we are.
 
Discrimination, racism....what else will Victoria do to cause division? If I lived in Melbourne, I would give St Vincent's a miss.
What's next? God help us!
 
Another waythegovernment are pushing ahead with the referendum on the voice
 
My experience last year with emergency wait time/triage was to say the least atrocious. I had a bad fall and presented myself to emergency at 3.30pm Sunday afternoon. I was put straight through to fast track and sat there until 9.40pm, then told have to go back out to general area as fast track was closing, but won't lose my place in the line. I sat back outside until 1am Monday morning until a nurse going off duty asked had I had an x-ray yet. Obviously not, as I had not even been triaged or offered pain relief. She organised an xray and as expected I had several complicated breaks in my right leg and both sides of my ankle. I then got put on a recliner chair and told to wait for a bed. Still no drs at this stage. I was moved to a bed in short stay at around 5am, still no Dr. It was around 11.30 am on the Monday when physio came to see me to discuss the breaks. Still no Dr appeared but was told physio had been discussing my breaks over the phone with orthopaedics at another hospital. Problem was, the physio only explained to me about the ankle breaks and did not realise I had also fractured my patella and mildly displaced it..I had to point that out to him. He rechecked the exrays, was caught out with the mistake and had to reassess the plastering, then I was eventually plastered and told I would be transfered to another hospital to see the ortho surgeon and not to put any weight or try to stand on the leg whatsoever. At 3.35pm that Monday a Geriatric Dr saw me but had no idea what he was doing. .. He instructed his team to get me up on crutches and walking. I refused and advised him the ortho Dr left strict instructions I was not to weight bare at all. Total incompetence all around. I ended up in hospital for a period of 14 weeks and 4 days and was shafted from one ward to another. Triage failed me and Drs failed me, the system failed me miserably. I do consider my trauma was at least a category 2 maybe even a cat 1...so why so long to be treated or seen by a Dr or even a nurse.
 
Do they have a clinic for self inflicted injuries and alcoholism too? Is putting them first in line ever going to change their lifestyle? Hardly. Call me what you like, because I don’t care. I was an ER nurse at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne, and got stabbed in the abdomen by one of these delightful people. Excuse me if I am not sympathetic. I had to have surgery to stitch up the wound they left. You can call me racist but I don’t care. Why don’t the critics work a day in our shoes, before they launch an attack against me. I’m done.
 
I have never heard that indigenous people are pushed back in line.
I believe everyone gets seen when its their turn regardless of what colour or race you are.

Now if indigenous people are seen before people who were waiting in line first then that is racist.

It's time everyone is treated equally regardless who we are.
That will never happen.
 
Another waythegovernment are pushing ahead with the referendum on the voice
Pam71, you have just hit the nail on the head!!!!!!!
 
My experience last year with emergency wait time/triage was to say the least atrocious. I had a bad fall and presented myself to emergency at 3.30pm Sunday afternoon. I was put straight through to fast track and sat there until 9.40pm, then told have to go back out to general area as fast track was closing, but won't lose my place in the line. I sat back outside until 1am Monday morning until a nurse going off duty asked had I had an x-ray yet. Obviously not, as I had not even been triaged or offered pain relief. She organised an xray and as expected I had several complicated breaks in my right leg and both sides of my ankle. I then got put on a recliner chair and told to wait for a bed. Still no drs at this stage. I was moved to a bed in short stay at around 5am, still no Dr. It was around 11.30 am on the Monday when physio came to see me to discuss the breaks. Still no Dr appeared but was told physio had been discussing my breaks over the phone with orthopaedics at another hospital. Problem was, the physio only explained to me about the ankle breaks and did not realise I had also fractured my patella and mildly displaced it..I had to point that out to him. He rechecked the exrays, was caught out with the mistake and had to reassess the plastering, then I was eventually plastered and told I would be transfered to another hospital to see the ortho surgeon and not to put any weight or try to stand on the leg whatsoever. At 3.35pm that Monday a Geriatric Dr saw me but had no idea what he was doing. .. He instructed his team to get me up on crutches and walking. I refused and advised him the ortho Dr left strict instructions I was not to weight bare at all. Total incompetence all around. I ended up in hospital for a period of 14 weeks and 4 days and was shafted from one ward to another. Triage failed me and Drs failed me, the system failed me miserably. I do consider my trauma was at least a category 2 maybe even a cat 1...so why so long to be treated or seen by a Dr or even a nurse.
Sad but oh so very true!
 
  • Like
Reactions: Sherril54
Do they have a clinic for self inflicted injuries and alcoholism too? Is putting them first in line ever going to change their lifestyle? Hardly. Call me what you like, because I don’t care. I was an ER nurse at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne, and got stabbed in the abdomen by one of these delightful people. Excuse me if I am not sympathetic. I had to have surgery to stitch up the wound they left. You can call me racist but I don’t care. Why don’t the critics work a day in our shoes, before they launch an attack against me. I’m done.
I'm with you Gezzabel, I don't care either and putting them first in line isn't going to change their lifestyle and I am sick of hearing that it is, 'our fault', for how they are.......utter bullshit, just a cop out! If they want to change, they would! So I will join you in: call me what you like, because I don't care either!!
 
We are all the same and it is about time that the Government treated us all, as equals and not dividing us!
 
And since when has the Melbourne CBD been considered part of Remote Australia???? If they are brought in by plane or chopper of course they go straight in!!!!
 
if I recall the aboriginals. didn't have hospitals we certainly dont want to corrupt them we give them approx 1 billion dollars a year they could build an aboriginal hospital or they could assimilate and join in the improvements we have made to this island... ps when captain cook came here there was NO formal aboriginal nation , just a lot of wild natives at war with each other and certainly NO established leaders or peaceful existence or mutual co existence with each other ....there was no NATION of aborigines
 
Do they have a clinic for self inflicted injuries and alcoholism too? Is putting them first in line ever going to change their lifestyle? Hardly. Call me what you like, because I don’t care. I was an ER nurse at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne, and got stabbed in the abdomen by one of these delightful people. Excuse me if I am not sympathetic. I had to have surgery to stitch up the wound they left. You can call me racist but I don’t care. Why don’t the critics work a day in our shoes, before they launch an attack against me. I’m done.
Some people (of any colour), have the inability to understand, unless the unfortunate incidents actually happen to them.

“Nurses are the heart of healthcare.” – Donna Wilk Cardillo

The doctors may be mapping out the war games, but it is the nurses who make the conflict bearable.” – Jodi Picoult

I’ve never been a nurse, but like many, we respect their work and what they stand for. ⭐
 
Oh for... I'll probably get flamed for this, but why are so many services duplicated? Put the money towards ONE for ALL, and stop the duplication! *SIGH*
I agree, we are all supposed to be "Australian" I thought.
 
Surely it is the urgency of the condition being treated and not what race you are.
 

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