Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

'British Columbia is prepared for possible Ebola patient'

The Canadian Press , 14 Oct, 2014 10:08 PM
    VICTORIA - British Columbia's medical health officer says current infection-control guidelines are appropriate and the province is prepared if someone tests positive for Ebola.
     
    However, Dr. Perry Kendall told reporters on Tuesday that the infection of a health-care worker in Texas calls for B.C. hospitals to reassess infection-control practices.
     
    "We need to assure our health-care professionals on the front line that they will have the tools that they need and will feel comfortable and confident in using them," he said.
     
    His statement comes after the B.C. Nurses' Union sent a letter to Mary Ackenhusen, the president of Vancouver Coastal Health. The union wrote that the authority wasn't ready to respond to any Ebola cases and members said they had not been trained to care for such patients.
     
    "On paper things may look good, however we have been canvassing our members on designated units who advise ... that it is simply not the case," said the letter from Gayle Duteil, president of the union.
     
    "Nurses and their families are legitimately scared. If the health system wants our members to put themselves at risk of exposure to a deadly disease, we expect that every reasonable precaution be put in place on a priority basis."
     
    The union outlined a 10-point plan that it believes requires attention. The plan includes training around assessment of patients, proper procedures for putting on and removing personal protective gear, handling waste, and guidance for handling deceased patients.
     
    Given the authority's lack of preparedness, we have no choice but to advise our members that they should only provide care to patients with suspected or confirmed cases of Ebola if they have been provided with the proper training and equipment, the letter said.
     
    Three people who were suspected of having the Ebola virus in B.C. have tested negative, Kendall said.
     
    Kendall said he has issued directions to ensure that the B.C. health-care system has the capacity and expertise to deal with such a crisis
     
    "Our first priority will be on establishing the processes to familiarize or to refamiliarize our health-care workers with personal protective equipment, so that if they have to use it, they can do so safely and with confidence.
     
    Kendall noted that this isn't the first time the health-care system has been confronted with a deadly disease.  
     
    People were terrified of exposure to HIV during the 1980s, he noted.
     
    "People would not treat people with the disease. They refused to treat them. Yet we worked out way through that one."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police
    TORONTO — Four people have been arrested in a shooting in northwest Toronto that sent five people to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    $7.9-billion Site C dam on Peace River gets environmental approval from B.C. and Ottawa

    $7.9-billion Site C dam on Peace River gets environmental approval from B.C. and Ottawa
    B.C.'s Environment Minister Mary Polak said the province remains convinced building the dam is in the public interest and its benefits  outweigh the risks of significant adverse environmental, social and heritage effects.

    $7.9-billion Site C dam on Peace River gets environmental approval from B.C. and Ottawa

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Officers Shot Peter DeGroot Who Set Off Five-day Manhunt

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Officers Shot Peter DeGroot Who Set Off Five-day Manhunt
    SLOCAN CITY, B.C. - British Columbia's police watchdog has confirmed that a man who set off a five-day police search was shot and killed in a confrontation with two members of the emergency response team.

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Officers Shot Peter DeGroot Who Set Off Five-day Manhunt

    B.C. Government Approves Certificate For Site C Dam

    B.C. Government Approves Certificate For Site C Dam
    VICTORIA - The British Columbia government has approved an environmental assessment certificate for the massive $8-billion Site C hydroelectric dam on the Peace River.

    B.C. Government Approves Certificate For Site C Dam

    Personal Info of 15,000 People Accessed From B.C. Government Site and Databases

    Personal Info of 15,000 People Accessed From B.C. Government Site and Databases
    VICTORIA - The B.C. government is trying to notify about 15,000 people whose personal information has been illegally accessed because of a data breach on a Ministry of Forests' website and associated databases.

    Personal Info of 15,000 People Accessed From B.C. Government Site and Databases

    Warning Issued To Drug Users As 31 People In Vancouver Overdose On Potent Heroin

    Warning Issued To Drug Users As 31 People In Vancouver Overdose On Potent Heroin
    VANCOUVER - Toxic heroin has resulted in 31 overdoses in two days at Vancouver's safe injection site — believed to be a record for the facility that opened 11 years ago.

    Warning Issued To Drug Users As 31 People In Vancouver Overdose On Potent Heroin

    PrevNext