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AustraliaHealth5 days ago

Women forced to labour in tearoom, run-down wards at NT's busiest hospital

A Darwin mother, Tessa Czislowski, described her experience of giving birth in substandard conditions at Royal Darwin Hospital (RDH), including labouring in a tearoom and a run-down birthing room. She reported being interrupted by hospital staff and other individuals while trying to give birth.

It has been almost a year since Tessa Czislowski spent hours labouring in a tearoom, before staff moved her to a "run-down" birthing room inside the Northern Territory's biggest public hospital.

The Darwin mother was already experiencing intense contractions by the time she reached Royal Darwin Hospital (RDH) on a busy night in June last year.

Nurses told her no birthing suites were available and Ms Czislowski said she laboured for an hour in the hospital's corridors.

Eventually, her obstetrician took her to the only available space: the maternity ward tearoom.

Tessa Czislowski says she spent an hour labouring in the hospital's corridor. ( Supplied )

Ms Czislowski said another mother was there too, waiting to find out whether her baby's decreased fetal movements meant something was wrong.

"She did an ultrasound with me laying on a couch [and] my husband standing at the door to stop anybody walking in," she said.

Over the next two hours, Ms Czislowski tried to block out the apologetic strangers walking in to make tea or coffee.

The Darwin mother says her labour was constantly interrupted by people walking into the hospital's tearoom and turning on the light. ( Supplied )

When a birthing room became available, she said it was cramped and the shared bathroom had a broken showerhead plus a malfunctioning door that left her exposed as she showered and used the toilet.

"The staff were fantastic, but the [hospital] facilities are very, very old and very run-down," she said.

The maternity facilities at RDH have continued to cop backlash since the Territory's only private maternity ward shut down last year .

Women have reported birthing in hot rooms with broken air-conditioning, and a growing number are choosing to travel interstate to have their babies , or leaving the NT altogether.

'Lack of physical space for patients'

Brigid Beilby's baby was born at RDH last month with jaundice.

The local mother said, despite voicing concerns and asking for preventative treatment, she was sent home.

"They just really wanted to discharge us and I think that came down to a lack of staff, a lack of equipment and physical space for patients," she said.

Ms Beilby said, in the space of just two days, her baby's condition worsened.

She rushed back to the hospital's emergency department, where doctors told Ms Beilby her baby could suffer brain damage or hearing loss.

Brigid Beilby says staff seemed eager to discharge her after the birth of her baby, which she believes was due to a lack of beds. ( Supplied )

Ms Beilby said the state of RDH had factored into the upsetting ordeal.

According to the local mum, the bathroom she was sharing with four other women had blood smeared on the floor and toilet seat, and was so small there was no space for anyone help her shower after giving birth.

No new hospital plans

Doctors say the issues at RDH extend beyond just the maternity ward, with many calling for the federal government to fund a replacement hospital.

Seven months ago, after a section of ceiling collapsed during a tropical cyclone, then-head of NT Health Chris Hosking said the hospital — now over 50 years old — was "creaking at the seams" and needed to be replaced .

In November, sections of the hospital ceiling collapsed during a cyclone. ( Supplied )

In May, the NT government highlighted what it described as a record health spend in its 2026 budget , but was accused of cutting operational funding and spending only $8 million on new health infrastructure — a fraction of the $2.7 billion committed to infrastructure projects in the Territory.

In budget estimates on Monday, NT Health Minister Steve Edgington acknowledged the Territory's hospitals had aged significantly but admitted replacing any of them was not a priority.

"The question around the specifics — 'Are we building a new hospital?' — I think the short answer is: No," he said.

"We have two-and-a-half years left in our term of government and no hospital could be built in that short timeframe."

Steve Edgington says RDH will not be replaced. ( ABC News: Pete Garnish )

However, he said Mr Hosking had been reappointed to a new role dedicated and was developing long-term plans.

Longer wait times, fed up doctors

Australian Medical Association NT (AMA NT) president John Zorbas said the underfunding issue had become so dire, doctors were no longer able to provide patients with the standard of care they deserved.

He said patients were facing longer wait times, hospital equipment was being pushed beyond its limits, and doctors were becoming fed up with the lack the necessary tools to perform their jobs efficiently, causing some to leave.

"We have some spaces, like the neonatal intensive care unit, that look the same now as they did 30 [or] 40 years ago," Dr Zorbas said.

"The MRI scanner that we have is running flat-tack — that list is always full."

During the NT's estimates this week, health department staff also conceded RDH's morphology scanner — a routine mid-pregnancy ultra…

Read the full article at ABC News (Australia)
Source document: Statement from Royal Darwin Hospital

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ABC News (Australia)State / PublicCenter5 days ago
Women forced to labour in tearoom, run-down wards at NT's busiest hospital

A Darwin mother, Tessa Czislowski, described her experience of giving birth in substandard conditions at Royal Darwin Hospital (RDH), including labouring in a tearoom and a run-down birthing room. She reported being interrupted by hospital staff and other individuals while trying to give birth.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a personal account of a patient's negative experience without overtly favoring any political perspective. It does not include commentary or framing that suggests a clear ideological slant. The focus is on describing events as recounted by the individual involved.

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