Manpower is a real challenge, warns Hospital Authority
Target of providing an extra 2,100 beds by 2021 can be met, says Hospital Authority boss, but finding enough staff may prove a harder task

Public hospitals are expected to need an additional 2,100 beds in the next seven years to meet demand from a growing and ageing population.

"We are confident that we can more or less fulfil the target number of additional beds needed by 2021, when all our expansion projects are completed," the authority's chief executive, Dr Leung Pak-yin, said yesterday. "But manpower is a real challenge to us even if the hardware can be expanded."
The public health system is short of 500 nurses and 310 doctors - up from some 250 doctor vacancies two years ago.
The authority also plans a review of the conditions and pay of the lowest-paid workers, support staff. Their turnover rate soared to a high of 15.6 per cent last year, from just under 14 per cent the previous year.
Turnover rates for doctors and nurses are falling however - down to 3.8 from 4.5 per cent for the former, and down to 4.6 per cent from 5.2 per cent for the latter.
The chronic staff shortage has curbed expansion of the public healthcare service, Leung said, and the number of beds in some areas, such as New Territories West and Kowloon Central, has failed to catch up with population growth.