Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Paramedics To Provide Basic Health Services In Small B.C. Communities

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Apr, 2016 11:22 AM
  • Paramedics To Provide Basic Health Services In Small B.C. Communities
VICTORIA — Paramedics will provide expanded health-care services in 73 rural and remote British Columbia communities, giving patients more access to primary care.
 
Health Minister Terry Lake says paramedics will deliver basic services such as checking blood pressure, helping with diabetes care and assessing medication.
 
The Health Ministry says more paramedics are being hired and will visit patients in their home or community to perform assessments requested by a referring health-care professional.
 
Ambulance paramedics of BC president Bronwyn Barter says paramedics are well suited to take on an expanded role.
 
Community paramedicine was introduced in nine B.C. communities last year and has now been expanded to the Interior, northern B.C., Vancouver Island and the Vancouver coastal area before it begins in Prince George next year.
 
The government failed to meet its promise of recruiting and retaining enough doctors by 2015 so every B.C. resident who needed a general practitioner would have one.

MORE National ARTICLES

RCMP Say Sexual Assault May Be Related To Other Incidents At UBC

RCMP Say Sexual Assault May Be Related To Other Incidents At UBC
Police say a 20-year-old woman has been sexually assaulted on the University of British Columbia campus.

RCMP Say Sexual Assault May Be Related To Other Incidents At UBC

Toxins May Have Caused Skewed Sex Ratio In Killer Whale Calves: Researcher

Toxins May Have Caused Skewed Sex Ratio In Killer Whale Calves: Researcher
The calf, known as J54, is one of eight babies born into the Southern Resident Killer Whale population since Dec. 30, 2014, but only one of the calves has been confirmed as a female.

Toxins May Have Caused Skewed Sex Ratio In Killer Whale Calves: Researcher

Could Be Six To Eight Months Before Judicial Process Moves Forward For Neil Bantleman

Could Be Six To Eight Months Before Judicial Process Moves Forward For Neil Bantleman
The family of a Canadian teacher jailed in Indonesia says it will take another six to eight months before he can feasibly be freed.

Could Be Six To Eight Months Before Judicial Process Moves Forward For Neil Bantleman

Worker Dead After Incident At Nanaimo, B.C., Pulp Mill

Worker Dead After Incident At Nanaimo, B.C., Pulp Mill
They found a man in his mid-30s who pronounced dead at the scene.

Worker Dead After Incident At Nanaimo, B.C., Pulp Mill

Crews Make Progress Battling Fire In Massive Mountain Of Construction Debris

Crews Make Progress Battling Fire In Massive Mountain Of Construction Debris
The fire chief of a small town in Nova Scotia says crews are entering the final stages of battling a blaze at a waste processing and treatment site that's been burning for five days.

Crews Make Progress Battling Fire In Massive Mountain Of Construction Debris

Stephane Dion Questions Canadian Appointment As UN Human Rights Advisor

Stephane Dion Questions Canadian Appointment As UN Human Rights Advisor
 Canada's foreign affairs minister is questioning the appointment of a Canadian law professor to a key United Nations job.

Stephane Dion Questions Canadian Appointment As UN Human Rights Advisor