OIA REQUEST
Received:
30 September 2021
Due:
29 October 2021
Response Date:
20 October 2021
Subject:
Covid – DHB Treatment Protocols
In response to your request under the Official Information Act, please find our response below:
Request
1.
What is the Covid-19 treatment protocol for hospitalised cases?
There is now a national guideline for the clinical management of patients with COVID
infection that has been developed by the teams at Counties Manakau DHB. It is
evidence based and consistent with international practice. It is available via the
Ministry of Health website Interim Guidance - Clinical Management of COVID-19 in
Hospitalised Adults (PDF, 625 KB). We have locally adapted it to include the local
details of where things wil happen, who to call etc and to allow it to be accessed via
our antimicrobial guideline app, Microguide, from a smart phone. The content is
largely the same.
2.
Are some DHB's fol owing different treatment protocols from others?
We cannot comment on what other DHB’s are doing but we are using the national
guideline.
3.
Are DHB’s free to make decisions about treatments for individuals with Covid-19?
Yes, as with all management there can be local decisions made however it would be
standard practice to adhere to the evidence base.
4.
To what extent are patients able to participate in decision-making about their
treatment programmes?
We expect our clinical teams to work alongside patients to develop shared goals of care
and design management around those. Choices around treatment would be discussed
with the patient as part of that including the issues when there are not treatments
available or proven for the condition being treated.
5.
If a patient requests a blood test for Vitamin D and/or the administration of high
dosage Vitamin C, are hospital staff able to provide these?
There would be a discussion with the patient around their wishes and clinical
consideration given as to the appropriateness of the request. If the request was to have
a test or treatment that is not currently appropriate or indicated given the latest available
recommendations or evidence in general, it would not be done. Vitamin D testing is
supported in some scenarios and therefore would depend on the clinical context. Given
there is no current clinical evidence-based recommendation for high dose Vitamin C we
do not provide it as part of treatment.
6.
Do hospital staff have the right to refuse a patient's request and, if so, is there a
process for a patient to appeal the decision?
Yes, they do. If requests are il egal, do not meet best practice guidelines and/or are not
funded by the public health system we can refuse a request. There are a number of
ways to appeal decisions however it would depend on the type of request.
Bay of Plenty DHB supports the open disclosure of information to assist the public
understanding of how we are delivering publicly funded healthcare. This includes the
proactive publication of anonymised Of icial Information Act responses on our website. Please
note this response may be published on our website.
Official Information Act | Bay of Plenty
District Health Board | Hauora a Toi | BOPDHB
You have the right to request the Ombudsman investigate and review our response.
www.ombudsman.parliament.nz or 0800 802 602.
Yours sincerely
DEBBIE BROWN
Senior Advisor Governance and Quality