Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s health minister warns high emergency medical care demand may be 'new normal'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2023 01:45 PM
  • B.C.'s health minister warns high emergency medical care demand may be 'new normal'

British Columbia Health Minister Adrian Dix says the province is experiencing unusually high demand for emergency medical services — even before the cold-and-flu season begins — and the situation may be a "new normal."

Dix was meeting doctors and officials at Surrey Memorial Hospital this morning to update them on expanding the facility's emergency capacity, after complaints this year from workers that they lack resources to cope with the large number of incoming patients.

Dix says the province has progressed on a number of fronts since announcing 30 initiatives in June to address doctors' grievances, including posting 64 nursing positions at Surrey Memorial, implementing patient ambassadors to improve care, and hiring more than 100 foreign-trained nurses across B.C.

But he also says the situation needs time to improve, as there are currently about 9,700 people in B.C. emergency care, about 700 more than at similar times in years past.

Dix says that typically dips below 9,000 in the summer, but not this year, when it kept increasing, creating worries ahead of the fall-winter flu season when emergency demand spikes.

In May, Surrey Memorial's Medical Staff Association issued an open letter to management, criticizing their lack of “any tangible support” for overstretched emergency-room doctors and placing the health of Surrey residents in jeopardy.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal government pledges $5M to Chinese Canadian Museum in Vancouver

Federal government pledges $5M to Chinese Canadian Museum in Vancouver
The museum will feature an exhibition titled "The Paper Trail to the 1923 Chinese Exclusion Act," with the July 1 opening date coinciding with the centennial of the passing of the act which effectively halted all immigration from China.

Federal government pledges $5M to Chinese Canadian Museum in Vancouver

Feds tweak verified traveller program

Feds tweak verified traveller program
Eligible passengers, including Nexus members, won't have to take their shoes off and can keep their laptops and liquids in their bags instead of putting them onto the X-ray conveyor belt.   

Feds tweak verified traveller program

Majority of homeowners in BC are investors

Majority of homeowners in BC are investors
New numbers released by Statistics Canada show investor-occupants made up almost 10 per cent of British Columbia homeowners in 2020. The agency attributes the high numbers in B-C to incremental forms of density, such as single-detached houses with secondary suites or laneway units, duplexes, or triplexes.

Majority of homeowners in BC are investors

Province invests in seniors

Province invests in seniors
The province is offering 500-thousand dollars in grants for programs or plans aimed at helping seniors lead independent, active lives. Applications open June 1st for the age-friendly grants, which can be as much as 25-thousand dollars each.

Province invests in seniors

Armed break and enter in Victoria

Armed break and enter in Victoria
Police in Victoria say two people have been arrested after reports of an armed break and enter at a residential building in the city. Two people were arrested and taken into custody three hours later, just before 11 A-M.

Armed break and enter in Victoria

Premier David Eby makes a statement on 109th anniversary of the Komagata Maru

Premier David Eby makes a statement on 109th anniversary of the Komagata Maru
“When they should have been welcomed, they were instead met by hostility and prejudice. Canadian immigration officials refused to let them leave the boat. The passengers were confined to the ship for two months, during which supplies of food and even water were restricted, making conditions intolerable". 

Premier David Eby makes a statement on 109th anniversary of the Komagata Maru