Labor kicks off campaign with hospital beds pledge
The Labor Party has kicked off its state election campaign pledging to open 300 more hospital beds and recruit 100 more doctors.
Opposition Leader Peter Malinauskas at Sunday's Labor campaign launch at Adelaide Oval. Photo: Ben Baker / Supplied
The Opposition’s strong election focus on ambulance ramping is set to continue today with further plans to be outlined in health.
Labor’s $331 million health pledge, which includes $182 million in funding for 98 new mental health beds, was unveiled at the party’s campaign launch at Adelaide Oval on Sunday after Governor Frances Adamson issued the writs to the electoral commission the day before – firing the starting gun on the March 19 poll.
The pledge would see Labor open 72 new mental health beds in metro hospitals – 24 each at the Queen Elizabeth, Modbury and Noarlunga hospitals – along with six new beds at Mount Gambier Hospital and 20 mental health community hospital in the home beds.
Meanwhile, the 100 additional doctors in the public health system will be “on the books within four years”, according to Opposition leader Peter Malinauskas.
It comes after InDaily revealed in October that vulnerable mental health patients are waiting an average of more than 20 hours in the Royal Adelaide Hospital emergency department for a bed.
Adjunct Professor John Mendoza, who last year spectacularly quit his post as executive director of mental health and prison health services at the Central Adelaide Local Health Network – in protest of a lack of progress on mental health reform – welcomed Labor’s announcement, along with the Australasian College of Emergency Medicine.
1/3 Excellent to see that @PMalinauskasMP has made #mentalhealth the key plank in the @alpsa election launch. Fundamental to the wellbeing of SA to have a functional care system. | @RebeccadiGirola @PictonChris @ian_hickie @PDFurst https://t.co/EjPvUgiM6h
— John Mendoza (@johno0910) February 20, 2022
Malinauskas said he would outline further plans on health today.
“It is now clear Labor is the only party going to this election with a plan to fix the ramping crisis,” he said in a statement this morning.
“Today I will continue to outline Labor’s plan to fix the ramping crisis and deliver an historic investment in our health system.”
Meanwhile, Premier Steven Marshall spent much of Sunday at a series of volunteer events in marginal seats – including Adelaide, Elder, King, Wright and Badcoe – to spruik the State Government’s reactivation of the Repat Health Precinct and upgraded emergency department at the Flinders Medical Centre.