Update On Efforts To Alleviate Shortage Of Hospital Beds And Nursing Staff In Public Hospitals
9 January 2024
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NOTICE PAPER NO. 2456
NOTICE OF QUESTION FOR ORAL ANSWER
FOR THE SITTING OF PARLIAMENT ON 09 JANUARY 2024
Name and Constituency of Member of Parliament
Assoc Prof Jamus Jerome Lim
MP for Sengkang GRC
Question No. 5521
To ask the Minister for Health (a) whether there remains shortages of hospital beds and available nursing staff in public hospitals, relative to a year ago; (b) what is the progress of ongoing plans to increase hospital capacity; and (c) whether public hospitals are currently facing capacity constraints, even in non-crisis environments, and, if so, why.
Written Answer
1. Like most developed countries, Singapore continues to experience a capacity crunch post COVID-19. This is aggravated by an ageing population. Hospitals are seeing more elderly patients with more complex conditions, who require much longer length of stays.
2. We will need to continue increasing our hospital capacity. We have also been building up our nursing workforce, and the staffing situation in our public hospitals has improved relative to a year ago.
3. While hospital infrastructure projects were delayed due to the pandemic, we are progressively catching up. Tan Tock Seng-Integrated Care Hub (TTSH-ICH) has opened 300 beds since October 2023 while Woodlands Health Campus (WHC) is expected to be in operation by middle of this year, with 360 beds in operation, and almost 600 by end of the year. Plans for Eastern Integrated Health Campus and redevelopment of Alexandra Hospital remain on track to be completed by the end of the decade.
4. In addition, hospitals are tapping on facilities like Transitional Care Facilities and alternative care models like Mobile Inpatient Care@Home (MIC@Home) to expand overall capacity.