Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Announces Urgent Care Centre In Vancouver Set To Open On Monday

Darpan News Desk, 26 Nov, 2018 12:00 AM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's health minister has announced the opening of the province's fifth urgent primary care centre in order to lessen demand on emergency departments.
     
     
    Adrian Dix said the facility opening in downtown Vancouver on Monday will provide treatment on evenings and weekends for non-life-threatening conditions.
     
     
    The centres are part of the government's plan to reform primary care through a "team-based" approach that includes a doctor and other health-care providers including nurse practitioners and pharmacists.
     
     
    About 750,000 people in the province do not have a family doctor and often end up going to hospital emergency rooms, Dix said Sunday at the centre.
     
     
    "There are currently 20,000 people in the city centre without a doctor," he said, adding about a third of them go to emergency departments at two nearby hospitals for conditions that could be treated at the centre.
     
     
    "It's our intention, our determination, to have one new urgent primary care centre in each health authority every six months for the next two years," Dix said.
     
     
    The province plans to open a total of 10 centres.
     
     
    In new year, the Vancouver facility is expected to provide access to four family doctors in the same building.
     
     
    "Additionally, basic lab services and X-rays will be provided onsite at the centre, and a pharmacy is also located in the building," Dix said.
     
     
    Patients with mild to moderate mental health and substance-use challenges will be provided "same-day access to community supports," he said.
     
     
    Dr. Eric Cadesky, president of Doctors of BC, said the best health-care systems in the world include access to strong primary health care.
     
     
    "We're hopeful that this urgent primary care centre will be able to meet two of our community's greatest needs: access to urgent care after traditional business hours and attachment of people to family doctors who will care for them on an ongoing, long-term basis," Cadesky said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa Argues One Province's Failure To Bring In A Carbon Tax Will Harm Others

    Ottawa Argues One Province's Failure To Bring In A Carbon Tax Will Harm Others
    Last week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau detailed a plan to charge a carbon tax in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick — the four provinces refusing to comply.

    Ottawa Argues One Province's Failure To Bring In A Carbon Tax Will Harm Others

    Halifax Woman Plans To Die On Thursday, Saying Ottawa Is Forcing Early Death On Her

    There's No Reason I Should Have To Die On Nov. 1 ... I Want To Live As Many Days As I Can.

    Halifax Woman Plans To Die On Thursday, Saying Ottawa Is Forcing Early Death On Her

    Kelly Ellard, Killer Of B.C. Teen Reena Virk, Has Day Parole Extended For Another Six Months

    Thirty-five-year-old Kelly Ellard was convicted of second-degree murder in 2005 and the Parole Board of Canada granted her conditional day parole last November.

    Kelly Ellard, Killer Of B.C. Teen Reena Virk, Has Day Parole Extended For Another Six Months

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action
    TORONTO — Canadian wildlife are not exempt from a "global biodiversity crisis" that is devastating worldwide animal populations, according to a stark new report by the World Wildlife Fund.

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action

    Incumbent B.C. Mayor Wins Election Decided By Pulling A Name Out Of A Box

    PEACHLAND, B.C. — The winner of the mayor's race in Peachland, B.C., has been decided by a pulling a name from a box because the top two candidates remained tied after a judicial recount on Monday.

    Incumbent B.C. Mayor Wins Election Decided By Pulling A Name Out Of A Box

    Alberta Appeal Court Upholds Sentence Of Man For Kidnapping, Cutting Off Thumb

    Alberta Appeal Court Upholds Sentence Of Man For Kidnapping, Cutting Off Thumb
    EDMONTON — Alberta's highest court has upheld a 12-year sentence for a man who cut off his victim's thumb during an abduction.

    Alberta Appeal Court Upholds Sentence Of Man For Kidnapping, Cutting Off Thumb