Staff who posed as patients at Victorian hospital won’t be disciplined over ruse

Hospital workers will not be disciplined for pretending to be patients to make a regional Victorian facility look busy during the health minister’s visit.

About 10 staff posed as patients in the waiting room of Colac Area Health Urgent Care Centre in August 2023, a Victorian Health Department probe found.

The full report has not been made public but the executive summary states there was a “real possibility” patient care could have been impacted.

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It also found arrangements were made for at least one ambulance to arrive at the clinic with a person who did not require medical treatment, and a staff member who didn’t need treatment was on a trolley in a corridor.

“Each of those actions was taken to make it appear to the minister that the (clinic) was busier than it actually was on the day of the visit,” the summary said.

The fake patients were registered in the clinic’s records before the minister arrived and removed after she left.

Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas said she didn’t notice the ruse at the time and was disappointed by what happened.

“I had no reason to think anything was untoward,” Thomas said on Wednesday.

“It’s certainly not something that ever crossed my mind.”

Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas said she had no idea about the ruse. Credit: AAP

The minister does not believe any similar incidents have happened at other health facilities.

“Our health service is full of dedicated, hardworking, committed doctors, nurses and allied health teams,” she said.

“This type of behaviour is completely unacceptable to me, as it is to them.”

The fake patients had varying degrees of involvement and those who took part were asked to do so.

Staff working in the clinic that day were found to be “generally aware or soon became aware” of the incident and went along with it because they thought the health service expected them to.

Colac Area Health Urgent Care Centre. Credit: Facebook

The probe recommended the fake patients who did not organise the incident should not face disciplinary action, which the department agreed to.

However, those who organised it could face consequences.

The department said it does not have authority to take employment action against them but the health service has been asked to review evidence and determine if they should be counselled, have further training or face disciplinary action.

The investigation also recommended the health service do more to ensure a safe culture where people can speak up.

The incident was first raised by a whistleblower and some staff only took part in the department’s probe on the condition of anonymity.

Ambulance Victoria’s internal investigation into the involvement of the ambulance is underway.

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