New Zealand doctors and nurses and medical staff are being canvassed about their availability to deploy to Fiji as the Covid-19 crisis worsens.
Thirty-nine people have now died in Fiji, with 639 new cases in the past 24 hours.
“There are already two New Zealand doctors, one an anaesthetist and one a defence forces public health specialist, on the ground in Fiji.”
Now an email has been circulated from the Ministry of Health's Pacific medical assistance team (NZMAT) asking if more surgical theatre personnel would be prepared to go.
It asks about their availability over the next one to four months to deploy "to a country that may have a Covid-19 outbreak or Covid cases in the community" for up to eight weeks at at time.
Fiji is the only country in the NZMAT zone with a community outbreak.
The email said people would have to prove they were fully vaccinated to be able to go.
A Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman said sending more medical personnel was a possibility but no decision had been made yet.
It continued to work closely with the Fiji government to determine if more support was needed, she said.
Christchurch anaesthetist Wayne Morriss was one of the two doctors there now.
He told Morning Report doctors and nurses there were working incredibly hard, often seven days a week.
New Zealand and Australian medical teams have been helping Fijians to improve systems so the hospital can manage severely ill Covid-19 patients as well as people who need urgent surgery, like emergency caesareans.
In the past 24 hours some less sick Covid-19 patients were moved from the hospital to the national gymnasium in Suva, where they could be monitored but transferred back to the hospital if needed, he said.
There were also clinics at a sports arena and tents outside of it.
Getting the whole country vaccinated was critical, and it was going very well so far, with about 55 percent of people having their first dose of the Astra Zeneca vaccine, Morriss said.