Monday, July 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Emergency Service Says No One Factor Influences Ambulance Response Times

The Canadian Press, 02 Dec, 2016 01:59 PM
    VANCOUVER — An official with BC Emergency Health Services says response times for ambulances are affected by many factors, making it is difficult to single out what impact the overdose crisis is having on the system.
     
    Linda Lupini, the organization's executive vice-president, says across the province, average response times have held steady in 2016.
     
    The president of the Ambulance Paramedics of B.C. said this week that a couple recently injured in a car crash in Surrey had to wait 3 1/2 hours for an ambulance.
     
    Bronwyn Barter says she's not shocked to hear about the delays and the $5 million in funding announced by the province to help paramedics and dispatchers better respond to the fentanyl crisis won't make much of a difference.
     
     
    Lupini says that in Vancouver, 911 response times are about 17 seconds slower in 2016 than in the last fiscal year.
     
    In Surrey, the times have improved by 42 seconds and the city was one of the areas where three new ambulances were added earlier this year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C.'s Powerhouse Economy Must Help The 1 In 5 Kids Living In Poverty

    B.C.'s Powerhouse Economy Must Help The 1 In 5 Kids Living In Poverty
      The 2016 report from First Call: BC Child and Youth Advocacy Coalition says that number rises to more than 50 per cent of children in single-parent families.

    B.C.'s Powerhouse Economy Must Help The 1 In 5 Kids Living In Poverty

    Suspected Fentanyl-Related Deaths In Regina Prompt Police Warning

    REGINA — Police in Regina have issued a warning to the public about using fentanyl after the painkiller was suspected in the deaths of two people in the city earlier this month.

    Suspected Fentanyl-Related Deaths In Regina Prompt Police Warning

    Bank Of Canada Releases Short List Of Women To Be Featured On Next Bank Note

    Bank Of Canada Releases Short List Of Women To Be Featured On Next Bank Note
    OTTAWA — Two activists, a poet, an engineer and an athlete are on the short list of five women whose image could appear on the next new series of Canadian bank notes due out in 2018.

    Bank Of Canada Releases Short List Of Women To Be Featured On Next Bank Note

    RCMP Reaches Agreement With China To Combat Flow Of Fentanyl To Canada

    RCMP Reaches Agreement With China To Combat Flow Of Fentanyl To Canada
    The RCMP says it has reached an agreement with China to try and stop the flow of illicit fentanyl into Canada.

    RCMP Reaches Agreement With China To Combat Flow Of Fentanyl To Canada

    Province Invests $2 Million For New Housing Project In Burnaby

    BURNABY – People with developmental disabilities in Burnaby will soon have access to nine new units of affordable housing.

    Province Invests $2 Million For New Housing Project In Burnaby

    Premiers Look To Push Trudeau On Health Care Spending In December

    Premiers Look To Push Trudeau On Health Care Spending In December
    OTTAWA — Northwest Territories Premier Bob McLeod says the provinces and territories are pushing to make health care spending a priority when they sit down next month with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

    Premiers Look To Push Trudeau On Health Care Spending In December