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Health

Private hospitals on standby to take patients as Omicron COVID-19 wave puts pressure on health system

Health Minister Greg Hunt outlines the government's next responses to the Omicron wave.

The federal government has reminded the states and territories an agreement struck in the early days of the pandemic for private hospitals to help the public health system can still be used, as COVID-19 cases continue to soar.

When the pandemic first began — and there were fears the system would be overwhelmed — the government struck a deal with private hospitals nation-wide to gain access to beds and extra staff.

In return, the Commonwealth agreed to support private hospitals while elective surgeries — their main form of income — were cancelled.

Facing a real surge in cases thanks to Omicron, Health Minister Greg Hunt confirmed the arrangements were still in place.

"The private hospitals agreement will see up to 57,000 nurses and [more than] 100,000 staff made available to Omicron-affected areas around the country," he said.

"It's a workforce which is skilled, planned, appropriate and available.

"They are clinically trained, they are expert [staff]."

Some private hospitals and their staff are already being seconded to the public system in New South Wales and Victoria and, to a lesser extent, in Queensland.

Mr Hunt also said the agreement meant there would be extra help available for aged care facilities that needed extra staff and resources.

As well as staff, one of the other crucial resources private hospitals have to offer are beds in ICU.

A surge in COVID-19 cases from the Omicron strain has been weighing on nearly all state and territory health systems.

In Victoria, the government has issued a statewide Code Brown, which could see health staff have their leave postponed and non-essential services deferred.

The emergency setting is usually reserved for external emergencies, such as natural disasters, and is a way of the streamlining the health system's emergency management in response to a growing number of people in hospitals.

Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly noted that planning for the situation currently facing the Australian hospital system had been underway since the beginning of the pandemic.

"This is the first time that the health system has come under pressure to the extend that we're seeing in the last week or two," he said.

But, he indicated, it looked like the worst would soon be over.

"I said on the weekend, and I stand by those statements, that we are either at or close to the peak of this in certain states."

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