Hospitals across the North Island have been hit by a major IT outage, impacting access to crucial patient information and causing chaos in emergency rooms.
From late yesterday, the outage took down ED, laboratory and inpatient systems in Auckland and Northland.
This forced nurses and doctors to resort to manual back-ups, paper-based systems and whiteboards overnight.
The Public Service Association (PSA) said nurses had to take on admin tasks, creating “chaos” in EDs and other departments.
This incident had “potentially deadly consequences for patients”, the PSA said.
“The outage prevented clinicians accessing key patient information and communicating internally and across the region, slowing down decision-making on patient care,” the PSA said.
Health New Zealand Northern Region executive director Andrew Brant confirmed Health NZ hospitals in Te Tai Tokerau, Waitematā, Auckland, and Counties Manukau experienced an IT outage yesterday.
He said this impacted some clinical and operational systems.
“The outage lasted around 12 hours, with services restored to all impacted hospitals in the early hours of this morning,” Brant said.
He said hospitals and emergency departments remained open and patient care continued safely during the incident.
“We are currently completing an incident debrief to identify any potential opportunities to improve our systems.
“We appreciate the professionalism and adaptability of our staff across the region in managing the disruption,” Brant said.
Outage causes ‘chaos’
Patient Elinor Kennedy was at Auckland Hospital ED last night when the systems crashed, which forced her and others to wait hours to be triaged.
“It was way more chaotic than even an ED should be. One triage nurse was having to transcribe all notes by hand.
“The ED was filling up around her, well past the point of overflowing,” Kennedy said.
Kennedy said lab results couldn’t be emailed to ED, so communication with labs was entirely reliant on phone communication.
“There were not enough administration staff on-site, which meant nurses had to fill in to support with administration tasks instead of their clinical duties.
“The nursing and administration staff showed amazing resilience under enormous pressure but were clearly frustrated at the gaps being laid bare in the system,” Kennedy said.
A doctor in the emergency room of Middlemore Hospital also confirmed they were experiencing the outage.

The Emergency Department sign at Auckland Hospital.
IT failure exposes Govt’s ‘reckless cuts’
The PSA said this major outage has exposed the Government’s cuts to digital health services.
The PSA said it was “time for Govt to admit fault and properly fund the upgrade of old IT systems”.
National Secretary for the PSA, Fleur Fitzsimons, said the Government should take blame for this incident.
“These failures are a direct result of its short-sighted decision to underfund and cut roles at Health NZ’s digital services team,” Fitzsimons said.
“The Government oversaw the loss of the very experts who maintain and upgrade these critical systems, and now we’re seeing the predictable consequences - hospitals forced onto whiteboards and paper forms while trying to deliver modern healthcare.”
This incident follows outages at South Island hospitals earlier this month and the recent failure of the patient portal at Wellington Hospital.
The PSA is calling on the Privacy Commissioner to widen his investigation into the ManageMyHealth cyber attack to include a comprehensive review of the vulnerability of public health IT systems, which hold sensitive patient information.
“When clinical systems fail, patient safety is at risk. Doctors and nurses are doing their best with manual systems, but this is 2026 - our health system should not be grinding to a halt because of preventable IT failures,” Fitzsimons said.
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