Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Interior Health to restart surgeries

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Feb, 2022 05:11 PM
  • B.C.'s Interior Health to restart surgeries

KELOWNA, B.C. - British Columbia's Interior Health authority says it's taking a phased approach to resuming services that were paused last month, including rescheduling postponed surgeries and reopening in-patient services in several communities.

A statement from president Susan Brown says the impacts of the Omicron wave of COVID-19 on staffing in the region's health-care system are beginning to subside.

Brown says staffing isn't stable enough to safely restore all services next week, but it will reschedule procedures starting Wednesday and aims to clear the backlog as quickly as possible.

The announcement from Interior Health comes as the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 in B.C. continues to decline, at 733 on Friday from 744 the previous day.

Five more people have died, for a total of 2,786 COVID-19 related fatalities.

A statement from the Health Ministry says the province is also preparing to distribute COVID-19 rapid tests to the public, starting with seniors, and officials are expected to outline details of the plan during a news conference next week.

Interior Health says in-patient services will reopen Feb. 23 in Clearwater, where one new registered nurse has been recruited, while nurse-provided primary care services will return to normal that day at the Barriere and District Health Centre.

In-patient services are also set to reopen March 14 in Lillooet with two new nurses.

The health authority says overnight services at the Ashcroft Community Health Centre and the Slocan Community Health Centre in New Denver remain temporarily reduced to stabilize daytime services in those communities.

Health Minister Adrian Dix told a news conference this week that the proportion of health-care workers calling in sick was higher in the Interior Health region, which accounted for about two-thirds of all the non-urgent cancelled surgeries in B.C.

"But most everywhere else, we're going to be aggressively moving to rebook surgeries in the coming weeks because people need their surgeries," Dix said.

"And even if we describe these as non-urgent scheduled surgeries, they're all important, they're all necessary."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Vaccines preventing hospitalizations from Delta

Vaccines preventing hospitalizations from Delta
A new study in England suggests the Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines are extremely good at keeping people from ending up in the hospital with COVID-19, even after just one dose.

Vaccines preventing hospitalizations from Delta

Uppal apologizes for role in divisive policies

Uppal apologizes for role in divisive policies
A former Conservative cabinet minister is apologizing for not pushing against his party's culturally divisive polices of the Stephen Harper era, including an effort to ban face coverings during citizenship ceremonies.

Uppal apologizes for role in divisive policies

Trudeau wants NATO unity on China, Russia

Trudeau wants NATO unity on China, Russia
Canada's prime minister used his time at a summit of political and military allies underlining the need to present a united front against Russia, China and the general threat of authoritarianism.

Trudeau wants NATO unity on China, Russia

Canada won't take more doses from COVAX

Canada won't take more doses from COVAX
Canada has contracts to buy more than 251 million doses of seven different vaccines from vaccine makers, more than three times what it needs to fully immunize every Canadian.

Canada won't take more doses from COVAX

Business leaders demand border reopening plan now

Business leaders demand border reopening plan now
Business leaders are calling on Ottawa to immediately lay out a comprehensive plan to reopen the economy and international borders along with a vaccine certification process.

Business leaders demand border reopening plan now

B.C. woman seriously hurt in traffic stop

B.C. woman seriously hurt in traffic stop
The Independent Investigations Office says an officer ordered the woman who was riding an electric scooter to pull over late Saturday.

B.C. woman seriously hurt in traffic stop