Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

A look at B.C. health care promises ahead of Oct. 19 election day

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2024 05:18 PM
  • A look at B.C. health care promises ahead of Oct. 19 election day

The state of British Columbia health care has become a key issue ahead of the provincial election on Oct. 19 as the overburdened system attempts to cope with understaffing, frequent short-term closures of emergency rooms and hundreds of thousands of residents who don't have a family doctor.

Here are some of the health-related election promises from the three major parties:

B.C. New Democrats have promised to:

— Expand the conditions pharmacists can test and prescribe for to include more common illnesses such as strep throat, urinary tract infections and renal function. 

— Getting more qualified medical professionals back to work by providing immediate provisional licences for doctors, nurses, and midwives trained in Canada, and offer the same licences in six weeks for professionals trained in some regions outside of the country.

— Reduce time-consuming paperwork for doctors. 

— Add more physician assistants and expand the range of services they provide.

B.C. Conservatives have promised to:

— Offer care through both public and non-governmental facilities.

— Implement a "Wait Time Guarantee" that would arrange for care outside the province if services were not available in B.C. in a reasonable time.

— Expand programs to incentivize doctors and nurses to work in high-need communities.

— Improve reporting on administrative cost, savings and services and establish a mandate for transparent data

— Compensate health workers who lost their jobs for refusing to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

— Repeal the Health Professions and Occupations Act, sweeping legislation that merges B.C.’s health regulatory colleges from 15 to 6 that has been criticized by groups, including doctors and nurses. 

B.C. Greens have promised to:

— Establish a network of 93 community health centres across the province within the first year as part of what the party has called the "Dogwood model." They say the model streamlines complicated referrals and ensures comprehensive care all in one place.

— Lease and administer work space under the Dogwood model, allowing health-care professionals to focus on patient care.

MORE National ARTICLES

Driver of 1930s vehicle charged in Alberta car show crash that injured 2, killed dog

Driver of 1930s vehicle charged in Alberta car show crash that injured 2, killed dog
The driver of a 1930s vehicle has been charged after two pedestrians were struck and injured, and a dog was killed, in a crash at an Edmonton-area car show. RCMP in St. Albert were called to a collision last week at the Rock'n August Car Show.

Driver of 1930s vehicle charged in Alberta car show crash that injured 2, killed dog

Thundershowers to bring moisture to fire-weary regions of British Columbia

Thundershowers to bring moisture to fire-weary regions of British Columbia
The BC Wildfire Service says thundershowers are expected to bring some much-needed moisture to areas of the province where hundreds of fires are burning, including a destructive blaze in the Kootenays. It says in an update that the moisture will likely arrive in the Rocky Mountain Trench in the northeast, as well as the Southeast Fire Centre.

Thundershowers to bring moisture to fire-weary regions of British Columbia

Eight hospitalized, three dozen displaced after Vancouver apartment fire

Eight hospitalized, three dozen displaced after Vancouver apartment fire
Officials with the City of Vancouver say eight people have been taken to hospital after a fire at an apartment building in the Kitsilano neighbourhood. A statement from the city says the fire began at about 2:30 a.m. Wednesday and firefighters arrived "immediately" to fight the flames and evacuate residents. 

Eight hospitalized, three dozen displaced after Vancouver apartment fire

Five charged after Metro Vancouver drug lab bust: RCMP

Five charged after Metro Vancouver drug lab bust: RCMP
Mounties in Metro Vancouver say five men have been charged following an investigation that resulted in the dismantling of a large and sophisticated synthetic drug lab. RCMP say they began the probe in 2022, leading to the identification of people suspected of being involved in the production and trafficking of the drug MDMA.

Five charged after Metro Vancouver drug lab bust: RCMP

13 arrested in Railway protest

13 arrested in Railway protest
Thirteen people have been charged with mischief over accusations they blocked the Vancouver Canadian National Railway line for hours during what police said was an unlawful protest last May.  Vancouver police say the B-C Prosecution Service approved charges on Monday, following the police investigation into the pro-Palestinian protest on May 31st. 

13 arrested in Railway protest

Trade minister criticizes higher U.S. softwood lumber duties as unfair, unwarranted

Trade minister criticizes higher U.S. softwood lumber duties as unfair, unwarranted
Canada's international trade minister is criticizing the U.S. Department of Commerce for nearly doubling duties on softwood lumber, saying the move is unfair and unwarranted. Minister Mary Ng said the U.S. has significantly increased duties on softwood lumber from Canada, to 14.54 per cent from 8.05 per cent.

Trade minister criticizes higher U.S. softwood lumber duties as unfair, unwarranted