Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. health minister says system needs change

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Sep, 2022 02:41 PM
  • B.C. health minister says system needs change

WHISTLER, B.C. - Health Minister Adrian Dix says British Columbia has been in a health-care crisis since at least the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, while acknowledging there's urgent need for change.

Dix spoke in Whistler today at the Union of B.C. Municipalities, an annual meeting of municipal politicians, during a plenary on health care.

He says the pandemic has seen primary care transition to a disproportionately digital system, creating challenges alongside crises in paramedic services, nursing staffing levels and other areas.

Dix says the number of people without a family doctor has grown from about 340,000 in 2003 to 908,000 in 2017 and is expected to be higher this year.

He says the B.C. government is working to improve the compensation model for doctors, transition to team-based models of care and increase recruitment and retention practices.

Dix says 38,000 new staff have been added to the health system in B.C. since he became health minister in 2017 and says he knows that's not enough.

"You know what everyone in this room is saying to themselves right now? Not enough," Dix says.

"We need to transform the health-care system."

MORE National ARTICLES

BC Ferries delays after man arrested aboard vessel

BC Ferries delays after man arrested aboard vessel
It has provided no details about what happened on the Coastal Inspiration, which sails between Duke Point and Tsawwassen, but says availability of crew is also a factor in significant delays that could affect 10 sailings.

BC Ferries delays after man arrested aboard vessel

BCGEU talks resume as other unions line up

BCGEU talks resume as other unions line up
The BCGEU set up pickets outside liquor distribution warehouses last week and this week began banning overtime in a bid to pressure the province to return to the bargaining table.

BCGEU talks resume as other unions line up

Ottawa investing $60 million for skills training

Ottawa investing $60 million for skills training
Federal Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough made the announcement in Charlottetown, where a skills-training company in the city — Workplace Learning PEI — is set to receive about $1.5 million.

Ottawa investing $60 million for skills training

Trump used bully tactics in NAFTA talks: Freeland

Trump used bully tactics in NAFTA talks: Freeland
Freeland is responding to a characterization of herself as a frustrating and difficult negotiator in a new memoir by Trump's son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner. Freeland was the foreign affairs minister at the time and as such was Canada's chief negotiator in the talks.

Trump used bully tactics in NAFTA talks: Freeland

Visa delays leave international students in limbo

Visa delays leave international students in limbo
Students, universities, immigration consultants and even the High Commission of India have raised concerns about delayed visas putting many students' studies at risk. The High Commission of India in Ottawa said in a statement it was talking to Canadian universities about what can be done to accommodate the large number of Indian international students who are still waiting for visas.

Visa delays leave international students in limbo

Housing with OD services to be offered in Nanaimo

Housing with OD services to be offered in Nanaimo
Mental Health and Addictions Minister Sheila Malcolmson has announced the project in the Vancouver Island community alongside Mayor Leonard Krog, and she says in a release that the aim is to provide services in existing supportive housing.

Housing with OD services to be offered in Nanaimo