A distressing incident at Blacktown Hospital in Sydney’s west has highlighted the severe strain on New South Wales’ public health system. Raymond, a 70-year-old man with pre-existing medical conditions and critically low haemoglobin levels, was forced to lie on the cold, hard floor of the hospital’s emergency department for 24 hours while awaiting a bed.
The shocking case, brought to light by radio station 2GB, has sparked renewed scrutiny over chronic bed shortages and long wait times in Sydney’s overburdened hospitals.
Raymond arrived at Blacktown Hospital on Saturday, suffering from severe diarrhoea and a life-threatening condition. Despite his critical state, he endured an excruciating overnight wait, attempting to rest on the emergency department’s vinyl floor.
His daughter, Hayley, shared heartbreaking images with 2GB breakfast host Ben Fordham, showing her father curled up in pain. Another photo revealed an 80-year-old man, also waiting for a bed, sleeping on the floor under a blanket for at least 12 hours. Adding to the indignity, hospital staff reportedly told Raymond he could not sleep near the reception area, leaving his daughter to question, “What do you expect a 70-year-old to do?”
The ordeal was so unbearable that Raymond repeatedly called Hayley, expressing his desire to discharge himself and seek treatment in a small country town where wait times are shorter. “He said he’d rather go back to where he’s from because the wait times aren’t as bad,” Hayley told Fordham.
The incident underscores the dire situation at Blacktown Hospital, where only 41 per cent of emergency department patients are treated within clinically recommended time frames, according to the latest NSW Health data. The hospital ranks last among 20 in its category for timely emergency care.
Premier Chris Minns expressed deep concern over the situation, admitting the state’s health system faces an “enormous challenge.” Speaking on 2GB, he said, “You don’t want to be in a situation where a 70-year-old man has to curl up on the floor of the emergency department.
That is not good enough.” Minns highlighted the government’s efforts to address the crisis, including a $900 million investment in Rouse Hill Hospital, $2 billion for Bankstown Hospital, and rebuilds of Canterbury and Fairfield hospitals. He also noted the addition of 60 new beds across Blacktown and Mount Druitt hospitals as part of the largest investment in Western Sydney’s health infrastructure in decades.
“We’re putting more money into health than any government in the state’s history,” Minns said, while acknowledging that conditions remain far from ideal.
Opposition health spokeswoman Kellie Sloane described the situation as unacceptable, stating, “This shouldn’t be happening in our hospitals. I’m terribly sad for this gentleman and his family, decent people who have paid taxes their entire lives, and when they’re at their most vulnerable, the system has let them down.”
Sloane called for urgent solutions at Blacktown, one of the state’s busiest and most overstretched hospitals.
The incident follows similar reports from September 2024, when Minns vowed to address overcrowding at Blacktown after images surfaced of other patients sleeping on the waiting room floor.
The recent resignation of Western Sydney Local Health District chief executive Graeme Loy, just before a scheduled vote of confidence by doctors at Westmead Hospital, further highlights the mounting pressure on the region’s health services.