PROTOCOL FOR PUBLIC HOSPITALS A&E ON DIAGNOSTIC TESTS AND MEASURES AGAINST MISSED CRITICAL HEALTH SITUATIONS DUE TO CONSERVATIVE TEST ORDERS
11 November 2024
NOTICE PAPER NO. 3184
NOTICE OF QUESTION FOR ORAL ANSWER
FOR THE SITTING OF PARLIAMENT ON 11 NOVEMBER 2024
Name and Constituency of Member of Parliament
Ms Carrie Tan
MP for Nee Soon GRC
Question No. 6758
To ask the Minister for Health (a) what are the current guiding principles for how doctors in the accident and emergency (A&E) departments of public hospitals treat patients and decide on the diagnostic tests to order; and (b) what are the safeguards in place to prevent incidents where the conservative ordering of diagnostic tests can lead to critical health situations being missed out and treatment delayed.
Answer
1 Our public hospitals’ Emergency Departments (EDs) handle a large number of patients, some urgent, others less so. They have to triage patients to prioritise the urgent cases, provide initial treatment, and decide if patients require life-saving interventions, admission, further diagnostic tests or outpatient treatment.
2 ED physicians, in particular, play an important role in guiding these decisions. They assess and manage patients based on established treatment protocols, guidelines, and clinical judgement.
3 EDs are therefore a critical touch point. That said, not all tests leading to a definite care plan need to be performed in the ED; they can be performed later during the inpatient hospital stay based on the clinical assessment by the inpatient care team. The operations of ED are complex, high pace, deal with a wide range of patients, and are constantly in flux.
4 Treatment protocols are therefore regularly reviewed, taking into account the available clinical evidence and established best practices. Relevant process and outcome indicators are closely monitored to ensure clinical quality and patient safety.