Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Health complaints top B.C. advocate's list

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Oct, 2022 01:35 PM
  • Health complaints top B.C. advocate's list

VICTORIA - Complaints about British Columbia's health-care system to the provincial ombudsperson have reached a 10-year high.

Jay Chalke's annual report for 2021-2022 says the office received almost 1,300 complaints or inquiries focused on programs and services provided by the Ministry of Health.

The figure is more than 15 per cent of all 8,215 complaints lodged with the office in that period.

Chalke says in a news release that health care was top of mind for those who reached out to his office, with complaints ranging from visitor restrictions for long-term care to surgery delays, and COVID-19 measures to quality of care.

It says the Ministry of Health, the Insurance Corporation of B.C. and the Ministry of Children and Family Development were the top three most complained about public bodies.

Among the problems Chalke's office says it solved was that of a lottery winner whose $150,000 cheque was withheld because the B.C. Lottery Corp. tried to insist on signed waivers from friends who were with the woman when she bought the ticket.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Excel Career College expands opening 2 new campuses on Vancouver Island

Excel Career College expands opening 2 new campuses on Vancouver Island
Over their history, Excel has achieved this success by developing extensive relationships with employers across key industry sectors throughout the province and bringing on faculty and guest lecturers with real-world experience.

Excel Career College expands opening 2 new campuses on Vancouver Island

Snowbirds cancel two B.C. shows after malfunction

Snowbirds cancel two B.C. shows after malfunction
The statement says the CT-114 Tutor jets will not be flown while a Royal Canadian Air Force flight safety team investigates what happened on Tuesday in Fort St. John. The air force confirmed in an earlier tweet that the plane had been damaged but the pilot was not hurt.

Snowbirds cancel two B.C. shows after malfunction

3D-printed 'ghost guns' seized in B.C.: CBSA

3D-printed 'ghost guns' seized in B.C.: CBSA
The Canada Border Services Agency says in a statement that officers executed a search warrant in West Kelowna on April 27 in relation to the smuggled firearms parts and discovered a 3D printing machine in the process of printing a handgun frame.

3D-printed 'ghost guns' seized in B.C.: CBSA

Clayton Ruby, renowned Canadian lawyer, dies

Clayton Ruby, renowned Canadian lawyer, dies
Renowned Canadian civil rights lawyer Clayton Ruby, who took on some of the country's most groundbreaking and high-profile cases, has died, his law firm confirmed Wednesday. In a statement, Ruby Shiller Enenajor DiGiuseppe said Ruby died Tuesday afternoon surrounded by his family.

Clayton Ruby, renowned Canadian lawyer, dies

Van. home sales down 43% from last July: REBGV

Van. home sales down 43% from last July: REBGV
Sales in the region totalled 1,887 last month and were 35.2 per cent below the 10-year July sales average. The board says these figures signal a new market cycle characterized by lessening demand for homes is here.

Van. home sales down 43% from last July: REBGV

B.C. fire numbers grow but weather offers respite

B.C. fire numbers grow but weather offers respite
The blazes newly identified as "fires of note" include a nearly nine-square-kilometre fire northwest of Cache Creek in the Kamloops Fire Centre, another that has burned roughly two square kilometres northwest of Kamloops, and a third in the Southeast Fire Centre covering 15 square kilometres between Kaslo and New Denver.

B.C. fire numbers grow but weather offers respite