Mildura hospital on edge as state emergency declared

MILDURA Base Public Hospital is looking at ways to rapidly expand its ability to treat higher numbers of seriously ill COVID patients, as metropolitan and some regional hospitals move to an emergency status and put staff leave on hold.

The Victorian Government has declared a Code Brown emergency for all Melbourne hospitals and six in the regions, as the system feels the strain of high numbers of admissions and staff shortages caused by infections and close-contact isolation.

One of the affected regional hospitals is Bendigo Health, which has been the main source of pandemic patient-load support for Mildura.

The emergency status is effective from noon on Wednesday. It means some hospital staff may be recalled from leave and more emergency services can be deferred, and that individual hospitals can negotiate leave cancellations with staff where needed.

In Mildura, hospital chief executive Terry Welch confirmed that this region’s main public hospital had not been included in the Code Brown, but that it was still losing up to 20 staff a day to infection and contact isolation and had been balancing workloads and leave requests for months.

The hospital last week announced that it had been able to establish a dedicated COVID ward of eight beds, and two dedicated ICU beds. Asked by Sunraysia Daily whether more beds could be made available, Mr Welch said that “we are urgently reviewing that as we speak”.

Dedicated COVID wards require specific standards of air circulation and containment to keep the virus from spreading to other parts of the hospital and work is under way to achieve such measures beyond the rooms presently available, but this is expected to take at least six weeks to complete.

The government emergency declaration, more commonly used for incidents such as bushfires or other disasters and usually in place for only a few days, is expected to last from four to six weeks and is aimed at easing pressure on the system ahead of the expected peak of hospital cases.

As of Tuesday, there were more than 4000 health staff unavailable across the state after they tested positive for COVID-19 or were identified as close contacts.

Mildura received some relatively good news regarding case numbers on Tuesday, as new case numbers dropped to 52 from 87 the previous day. The number of active cases dropped from 902 to 769.

Victoria recorded 20,180 new COVID cases and 22 deaths on Tuesday, the nation’s deadliest day of the pandemic (a total of 77 fatalities), and 1152 patients were in hospital, although it was also the second consecutive day that Victorian case numbers decreased.

The total number of active cases in the state was 235,035 on Tuesday, a fall of about 10,000 cases since Monday.

Tuesday’s hospital patient numbers were a decrease of 77 on the previous day and the number of people in ICU dropped by two to 127, although 43 people were on ventilation, an increase of five.

Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton said on Monday that hospital admission numbers were yet to peak and might not for a month.

He said there was a lag of about two weeks between case numbers and hospital admissions, and three weeks for that to translate to ICU figures.

-with AAP

Digital Editions


  • Saints win the show

    Saints win the show

    BAMBILL brushed aside Werrimull with ease at Mildura Senior College on Saturday to move up to second on the MFNL women’s league table in the…

More News

  • Werrimull big winners in Millewa

    Werrimull big winners in Millewa

    WERRIMULL made it four MFNL A Grade wins on the trot when they stunned table-topping Bambill at the Mildura Senior College courts on Saturday. In an even battle all day,…

  • Taxation gets big return

    Taxation gets big return

    By securing a narrow 6-5 win, ladder leader Regional Taxation Services were the big winners in round 10 of the Sunraysia Table Tennis pennant. The victory over second placed team…

  • Heat up in a thriller

    Heat up in a thriller

    THE Mildura Heat women’s team claimed the split they were seeking on a tough road trip to Melbourne and Whittlesea at the weekend. The Big V Division One side got…

  • Canadian couple finds their place in Mildura

    Canadian couple finds their place in Mildura

    CANADA and Australia may sit on opposite sides of the world, but for Colin MacEachern, the similarities between the two countries made settling in Mildura feel surprisingly natural. “Many people…

  • Service provider recruiting feedback

    Service provider recruiting feedback

    SERVICE provider Intereach has called out for applications to its Consumer Advisory Body to help shape the region’s aged care services. The Aged Care Consumer Advisory Body is a voluntary…

  • Sunraysia roots shape Tiah’s international ambitions

    Sunraysia roots shape Tiah’s international ambitions

    TIAH Barone says growing up in Sunraysia gave her an early understanding of inequality, resilience and community. “Mildura is a very close-knit town,” she said. “When you grow up in…

  • Help local rescues find forever homes

    Help local rescues find forever homes

    THIS year’s Petstock Foundation-led Pet Adoption Month is more timely than ever as recent research by the organisation indicates one in six pet owners have considered rehoming their pet due…

  • Current affairs in print

    Current affairs in print

    IF you are writing a book that looks at the impact of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan on agriculture and rural communities, the best place to hold the launch is at…

  • Bruce’s special connection

    Bruce’s special connection

    ACCLAIMED sporting commentator Bruce McAvaney always knew he had a vague family link to the Sunraysia. He didn’t realise how strong that connection was to a remarkably strong line of…

  • Good library reads

    Good library reads

    How We Relate: A psychologist’s guide to building and maintaining good relationships by Dr Ahona Guha (Scribe, 2026) Understanding relationships isn’t just about other people—it starts with understanding yourself and…