Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hospitals To See 'Delays' In Care After Losing Saudi Students, Health Group Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Aug, 2018 12:31 PM
    OTTAWA — A health care group that represents the majority of university hospitals says losing Saudi Arabian medical residents is likely to result in delays, but ultimately won't impact the quality of care.
     
     
    Paul-Emile Cloutier, the president and CEO of HealthCareCan, says the primary concern among some hospitals is that there will be a delay in care in certain medical fields.
     
     
    About 1,000 Saudi residents and fellows were called back to the kingdom when it suspended diplomatic relations with Canada, a dramatic and angry response to a government tweet that criticized the Saudis for the arrest of female social activists.
     
     
    The medical residents have been told to return to the country by Aug. 31, forcing hospitals to come up with contingency plans in order to fill the gaps.
     
     
    Cloutier says contingency planning includes working out call schedules, weekend coverage and determining who will train students, which was the responsibility of the residents.
     
     
    Cloutier says delivery of health care is not exclusive to office hours, and many Saudi residents cover weekends and overnight call shifts.
     
     
    While he stopped short of naming specific programs likely to experience delays, Cloutier says he knows of a neurosurgery department that will lose a significant number of Saudi residents.
     
     
    "That means the person who would be getting the care might have to wait a little longer than usual because there's 13 people absent," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Smoke Gets In Their Eyes; Alberta, Prairies, Feel The Effects Of B.C.'s Fires

    Smoke Gets In Their Eyes; Alberta, Prairies, Feel The Effects Of B.C.'s Fires
    EDMONTON — Day has turned to night in Edmonton and many parts of Alberta as smoke from forest fires in British Columbia continues to roll into the province.

    Smoke Gets In Their Eyes; Alberta, Prairies, Feel The Effects Of B.C.'s Fires

    Crown Appealing Sentence For Winnipeg Man Ronald Siwicki Who Left Mother To Die On The Floor

    Crown Appealing Sentence For Winnipeg Man Ronald Siwicki Who Left Mother To Die On The Floor
    WINNIPEG — Crown prosecutors are appealing the sentence of a man who left his 89-year-old mother on the floor of their home for several weeks until she died.

    Crown Appealing Sentence For Winnipeg Man Ronald Siwicki Who Left Mother To Die On The Floor

    10-Yr-Old Saskatoon Girl Sells Lemonade To Raise Money To Help People With Cystic Fibrosis

    10-Yr-Old Saskatoon Girl Sells Lemonade To Raise Money To Help People With Cystic Fibrosis
    SASKATOON — A Saskatoon girl has turned her v stand into a non-profit business to raise money to help people with cystic fibrosis.

    10-Yr-Old Saskatoon Girl Sells Lemonade To Raise Money To Help People With Cystic Fibrosis

    Woman And Her Dog Are Missing After Hike Near British Columbia’s Jumbo Pass

    A woman and her dog have disappeared during a hike in Jumbo Pass in British Columbia's southeast.

    Woman And Her Dog Are Missing After Hike Near British Columbia’s Jumbo Pass

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake
    ANMORE, B.C. — Mounties say a man in his 40s drowned in Buntzen Lake in Metro Vancouver on Tuesday.

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police
    A Victoria police officer is nursing injuries after a collision early Tuesday between a police van and another vehicle.

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police