Vancouver-area hospital turned away patients at emergency department
Patients who went to Mission Memorial Hospital's emergency department on Tuesday evening were told to go to Abbotsford General or Maple Ridge hospitals, the first time a Vancouver-area acute care facility has turned away patients due to critical staffing shortages.
Fraser Health did not make the service disruption public, which is a departure from the policy in other health authorities to notify the community that they would not find medical care at a particular ER and to go elsewhere.
Pre-pandemic, such service disruptions were unheard of, and despite contracting to for-profit staffing agencies, the problem is only getting worse.
In a statement attributed to site medical director, Dr. Paul Theron, he wrote “Mission Memorial Hospital Emergency Department was not on diversion,” instead calling it “service adaptations” due to “physician staffing challenges.”
Sources tell CTV News there was only one doctor in the entire hospital, who was tasked with caring for admitted patients, and Theron’s statement acknowledges “emergency-trained nurses were available to support walk-in patients needing basic first aid, assist with re-direction of care, or transfer patients with urgent needs to a neighboring hospital.”
Fraser Health claims the hospital’s emergency department “is stable for tonight,” but they have been offering up to $4,125 for a 10-hour overnight shift for months and are still having trouble finding qualified doctors to work in the chronically short-staffed hospital.
Langley Memorial and Peace Arch hospitals are among the Fraser Health hospitals where doctors are now being offered hefty bonuses and “other incentives” to work “critical-to-fill shifts.”
The health authority points out they are “not alone in this challenge,” and it’s true that Interior Health, Northern Health and Island Health are contacting physicians with big bucks and guilt trips, but Fraser is B.C.’s largest health authority and many physicians live there, but opt to work at better-resourced hospitals in Vancouver Coastal instead.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Canada's response to Trump deportation plan a key focus of revived cabinet committee
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's promise to launch a mass deportation of millions of undocumented people has the Canadian government looking at its own border.
Who should lead the Liberals? 'None of the above,' poll finds
As questions loom over Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s leadership, a new Nanos Research poll commissioned for CTV News says a quarter of Canadians say none of the potential candidates appeal to them.
New technology solves mystery of late First World War soldier's flower sent home to Canada
In 1916, Harold Wrong plucked a flower from the fields of Somme, France and tucked it into a letter he mailed home to Toronto. For decades, the type of flower sent remained a mystery.
U.S. election maps: How did 2024 compare to 2020 and 2016?
Though two states have yet to be officially called, the U.S. election map has mostly been settled. How does it compare with the previous two elections?
Canada rent report: What landlords are asking tenants to pay
Average asking rents declined nationally on a year-over-year basis for the first time in more than three years in October, said a report out Thursday.
N.S. school 'deeply sorry' for asking service members not to wear uniforms at Remembrance Day ceremony
An elementary school in the Halifax area has backed away from a request that service members not wear uniforms to the school's Remembrance Day ceremony.
Remembrance Day: What's open and closed in Canada?
While banks and post offices will be closed nationwide on Remembrance Day, shops and businesses could be open depending on where you live in Canada.
Judicial recount for Surrey-Guildford confirms B.C. NDP's majority
The B.C. New Democrats have a majority government of 47 seats after a judicial recount in the riding of Surrey-Guildford gave the party's candidate 22 more votes than the provincial Conservatives.
48,584 space heaters recalled in Canada after burn injury in U.S.
Health Canada has announced a recall for electric space heaters over potential fire and burn risks, a notice published Thursday reads.