Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Surrey To Have First Of 10 Primary Care Centres In B.C., Using Team Of Experts

The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2018 12:44 PM
    SURREY, B.C. — British Columbia's premier has announced the opening of 10 urgent primary care centres across the province over the next year, starting with the first in Surrey this fall.
     
     
    John Horgan says the facilities will be staffed with health-care providers including doctors, registered nurses, nurse practitioners and dietitians.
     
     
    He says nearly 78,000 residents in Surrey lack a family doctor and they will be able to access care at the centre from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., seven days a week.
     
     
    Health Minister Adrian Dix says the facility would divert patients from emergency rooms when they don't need to be there.
     
     
    He says people without a family doctor would be connected with general practitioners and others at the facility and sometimes referred to the centre from other health-care providers in the community.
     
     
    Dix says one in six people in the province do not have a family doctor and the team-based approach is a more appropriate model of care because people may not always need a physician for their health concerns.
     
     
     
     
    He announced earlier this week that the province would provide funding for 50 new clinical pharmacists over the next three years. Some of them would be working with primary care teams.
     
     
    "We're going to have four doctors, we're going to have two nurse practitioners here, and seven registered nurses," he told a news conference outside a building where the centre will be built.
     
     
    "The principal idea here is to provide excellent primary care and an additional option to primary care."
     
     
    The province said in a news release that the centre would also be involved in outreach services by connecting nurses to community locations such as shelters.
     
     
    When it's fully staffed, the facility could accommodate up to 1,300 patient visits per week, it says.
     
     
    The team-based model of care has been used for years in other provinces, including Alberta and Ontario.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Homicide Detectives Probe Targeted Slaying Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

    A British Columbia man police say was known to them and was associated with drug activity has been found dead in the Fraser Valley.

    Homicide Detectives Probe Targeted Slaying Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

    UBC Must Pay Fired Author Steven Galloway $167,000 For Privacy Violation

    UBC Must Pay Fired Author Steven Galloway $167,000 For Privacy Violation
    The University of British Columbia must pay fired creative writing professor and author Steven Galloway $167,000 in damages for statements that violated his privacy rights and harmed his reputation.

    UBC Must Pay Fired Author Steven Galloway $167,000 For Privacy Violation

    Dera Chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh's 'Daughter' Honeypreet's Bail Plea Dismissed

    Honeypreet, whose real name is Priyanka Taneja, has been lodged in the Central Jail, Ambala, 45 km from here, since October last year.

    Dera Chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh's 'Daughter' Honeypreet's Bail Plea Dismissed

    Christian Retreat For The 'Sexually Broken' Cancelled In New Brunswick

    The Vancouver-based Christian Group Journey Canada was advertising an intensive retreat at Villa Madonna Retreat House, owned by the Catholic Diocese of Saint John.

    Christian Retreat For The 'Sexually Broken' Cancelled In New Brunswick

    Tories, NDP In Virtual Dead Heat As Ontario Election Looms; Liberals Well Back

    Tories, NDP In Virtual Dead Heat As Ontario Election Looms; Liberals Well Back
    TORONTO — Ontario's Progressive Conservatives under Doug Ford are set to head into voting day Thursday essentially tied with Andrea Horwath's New Democrats, a new poll suggests.

    Tories, NDP In Virtual Dead Heat As Ontario Election Looms; Liberals Well Back

    Looking To The Sky: B.C. Company Says It Is Sucking Carbon From Air, Making Fuel

    Looking To The Sky: B.C. Company Says It Is Sucking Carbon From Air, Making Fuel
    It sounds like spinning straw into gold: suck carbon dioxide from the air where it's contributing to climate change and turn it into fuel for cars, trucks and jets.

    Looking To The Sky: B.C. Company Says It Is Sucking Carbon From Air, Making Fuel

    PrevNext