❓ A WA parliamentary question seeks details on the operational budget, staffing, and patient statistics for both inpatient and outpatient eating disorder services at Princess Margaret Hospital and the Centre for Clinical Interventions. The response reveals PMH lacks a dedicated inpatient unit, while providing data on the Centre's outpatient services.
AnsweredQoN 7647Legislative Assembly
QuestionView source ↗
(1) What is the annual operational budget of the inpatient eating disorder unit at Princess Margaret Hospital; and
(a) how many Full Time Equivalents (FTEs) does it employ;
(b) how many in-patient beds does it provide;
(c) how much capital funding was spent on establishing this unit; and
(d) what is the annual capital expenditure of this unit?
(2) What is the annual operational budget for out-patient eating disorder services at the Centre for Clinical Interventions run by the North Metropolitan Area Health Service; and
(a) how many dedicated FTEs does the Centre employ to treat out patients with eating disorders;
(b) how many patients are presently receiving out-patient services for eating disorders at the Centre;
(c) how many patients are currently on the waiting list for out-patient services for eating disorders at the Centre; and
(d) what is the average waiting time for patients to gain access to out-patient services for eating disorders at the Centre?
(a) how many Full Time Equivalents (FTEs) does it employ;
(b) how many in-patient beds does it provide;
(c) how much capital funding was spent on establishing this unit; and
(d) what is the annual capital expenditure of this unit?
(2) What is the annual operational budget for out-patient eating disorder services at the Centre for Clinical Interventions run by the North Metropolitan Area Health Service; and
(a) how many dedicated FTEs does the Centre employ to treat out patients with eating disorders;
(b) how many patients are presently receiving out-patient services for eating disorders at the Centre;
(c) how many patients are currently on the waiting list for out-patient services for eating disorders at the Centre; and
(d) what is the average waiting time for patients to gain access to out-patient services for eating disorders at the Centre?
AnswerView source ↗
Answered
1 May 2012
Responded by
Minister for Health
Response time
34 days
(1) Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) does not have a dedicated eating disorders inpatient unit.
(a) Nil.
(b - d) Not applicable.
(2) $538,579
(a) 4.00 FTE
(b) 78
(c) 35
(d) As at 13 April 2012, the waitlist time is 6 months.
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com
(a) Nil.
(b - d) Not applicable.
(2) $538,579
(a) 4.00 FTE
(b) 78
(c) 35
(d) As at 13 April 2012, the waitlist time is 6 months.
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com
Explore WA Government Data
Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.
Explore more
Government Gazette
Appointments, regulatory notices, planning changes.
Hansard
Debates, questions, speeches and sentiment.
Tabled Papers
Reports and documents tabled in Parliament.
Committees
Committee profiles and recent reports.
Regulations
Subsidiary legislation with filters and summaries.
Bills
Proposed laws and parliamentary progress.
Acts
Current WA legislation and summaries.
Explanatory Memoranda
Bills with EMs (text/PDF) available.
Members
MP profiles, party breakdown and rankings.
Pollie Rankings
Data-driven rankings across 19 categories.
Amendment Chains
Track how schemes and regulations evolve over time.