General Surgery
Referral Acceptance
General Surgery referrals are prioritised by Senior Medical Officers based on the information contained within. Additional information should be attached where available. The priorisation tool used to grade referrals can be found below under Access Criteria.
- Skin lesion referrals are to be referred via the PHO skin lesion service in the first instance where they will be prioritised.
- Only hospital grade skin lesions referred from the PHO will be accepted at Tauranga and Whakatane Hospitals.
- All hospital grade skin lesion referrals from the PHO will be accepted with a wait time of up to 4 months.
All accepted referrals will be seen within a maximum waiting time of 4 months, unless there is a clinical reason for delay.
For plastics and vascular surgery information please see their own departmental pages.
Referral acceptance is a follows:
First Specialist Assessments |
|
Waiting priority 1 |
Accepted |
Waiting priority 2A |
Accepted |
Waiting priority 2B |
Accepted |
Waiting priority 3 |
Declined |
Waiting priority 3S |
Declined |
Waiting priority 4 |
Declined |
Breast |
|
Waiting priority 1 |
Accepted |
Waiting priority 2 |
Accepted |
Waiting priority 3 |
Accepted |
Waiting priority 4 |
Declined |
At First Specialist Assessment (FSA), patients are assessed by a specialist and if surgery is required, patients are then prioritised using the National General Surgery CPAC tool. A 0-100 score is allocated to each patient.
Prior to acceptance for surgery, patients are assessed in Anaesthetic preassessment clinic to ensure they are fit for surgery.
All patients accepted for surgery will be treated within a maximum waiting time of 4 months, unless there is a clinical reason for delay.
Surgery acceptance is as follows:
CPAC 65+ |
Accepted |
CPAC 64 and below |
Declined |
National Access Criteria for First Assessment (ACA)
Bay of Plenty Version (June 2014)
- Bariatric Surgery - The national board bariatric surgery prioritisation system
- Prioritisation tool for other general surgical and vascular referrals:
Category | Criteria | Examples (not an exhaustive list) |
1 - Immediate |
|
|
2A - Urgent |
|
|
2B - Semi-Urgent |
|
|
3 - Routine (Not accepted) |
|
|
3 S - Routine (Not accepted) |
|
- |
4 - Routine (Not accepted) |
|
|
Notes:
- "Clinical Priority" criteria are a guide rather than exhaustive, complete or exclusory. The grading surgeon may well take into account other factors such as comorbidity, age, history and previous investigation results to help prioritise a particular referral. The examples similarly are not necessarily prescriptive e.g., an elderly patient with severe ischemic heart disease and claudication may have a different priority from a postman with similar symptoms.
- Simple skin cancers are not considered "urgent" malignancies.
- Varicose veins if meet primary care management guidelines
- The waiting time criteria are to be seen as a guide to maximum wait - many 2As and 2Bs will be seen sooner rather than at the "maximum" wait time. If patients cannot be seen within time, then the referrer will be notified by administrative staff.