Auckland Perfusionists Kept National Services Pumping In 2025
1400+ Cardiac Cases, 39 Transplants, 100+ ECMO Cases – Auckland Perfusionists Kept Critical Health Services Pumping In 2025

New data from Health New Zealand underscores the critical role of the twenty clinical perfusionists at Auckland City and Starship Hospital who are responsible for three national services.
Clinical perfusionists manage both heart-lung bypass and Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) machines which breathe and circulate blood for patients whose lungs or hearts cannot, during complex surgeries and periods of critical illness.
Simply put, when perfusionists operate these machines for patients they replicate the body’s own circulatory system, pumping blood to and from the lungs, (oxygenating the blood if necessary) and pumping the blood back through the body.
In the 2025 calendar year, Auckland perfusionists workload included:
- Adult Cardiac Surgery:1,150+ cases
- Paediatric Cardiac Surgery:280 cases
- Organ Transplantation:15 heart and 24 lung transplants
- ECMO Retrievals:22 high-acuity transports (via air and land ambulance)
- ECMO Bedside Support:80 critically ill patient cases
- Weekend Surge Support:38 elective cases performed over 20 weekend days to manage waitlists.
“Clinical perfusion is a tiny but mighty part of our health system. These twenty professionals provide the essential technical expertise required to maintain New Zealand’s National Transplant and Organ Retrieval Service, the National Paediatric Cardiac Service, and the National ECMO Referral Centre,” said Dr Deborah Powell, APEX National Secretary.
The union for perfusionists, APEX, wants to see greater recognition for a team which is always on standby to travel nationwide at a moment's notice to provide essential life support to New Zealand’s most critically ill patients.
“Through 2025 Auckland perfusionists kept our national services pumping despite being understaffed by five full-time equivalents (FTE) for much of the winter. So many New Zealanders owe so much to this fantastic team,” concluded Dr Powell.
Mana Mokopuna: Children’s Commissioner Welcomes New Youth Mental Health And Suicide Prevention Services In Te Tai Tokerau
New Zealand Kindergartens: 100-Years On - Investing In Teacher-Led, Quality Early Childhood Education Is Investing In Aotearoa’s Future
Dry July: Thousands Set To Go Alcohol Free This July As Cancer Diagnoses Continue To Rise Across Aotearoa
New Zealand College of Midwives: Celebrating Midwives Across Aotearoa This International Day Of The Midwife
PPTA Te Wehengarua: Building The Secondary Curriculum On Broken Drafts Is A Serious Risk
Whanganui Regional Museum: Whanganui Makers Bring Textile Traditions To Life During Symposium Weekend