B.C. announces new health-care framework to better serve remote and Indigenous communities - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 04:31 AM | Calgary | -1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. announces new health-care framework to better serve remote and Indigenous communities

The provincial government has announced a new framework for health carein rural,remote and Indigenous communities to improve residents' access to criticaland culturally appropriate health care during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Framework includes more helicopters, ambulances to improve access to urban health-care facilities

B.C. Premier John Horgan speaks to the media on April 8, 2020. (Michael McArthur/CBC)

The provincial government has announced a new framework for health carein rural,remote and Indigenous communities to improve residents' access to criticaland culturally appropriate health care during the COVID-19 pandemic.

A statement Monday said improvements to the health-care system will include better modes of land and air transportation for people who need to leave their home community for treatment inlarger urban centres, including more planes, helicopters and 55 new ambulances.

The government is also offering access to "faster and culturally appropriate COVID-19 testing methods," as well as self-isolation accommodations nearer to hospitals away from home.Access to virtual health care will also be improved.

"Everyone in B.C. deserves to have health-care services delivered where they live," Premier John Horgan said during a news conference Monday.

The statement added the framework is flexible, so local leaders can tailor it to their communities' needs.

Watch |Dr. Danile Behn Smith explains why remote Indigenous communities are more vulnerable

Indigenous communities face COVID-19 on 'unequal footing'

4 years ago
Duration 1:54
B.C.'s Aboriginal health physician adviser says robust tracking "using both western and Indigenous data" is required to meet the needs of Indigenous patients.

Health officials and community leaders have said the new coronavirusadversely affects remote communities without quick, localaccess to medical care.Aboriginal health physician adviser Dr. Danile Behn Smithsaid Indigenous communities are further adversely affected by long-term,ongoing systemic and structural racism and discrimination.

"As a result of colonial practices and policies, we come into this epidemic on unequal footing. An ethicist colleague of mine noted that coronavirus doesn't discriminate, but systems can and do," she said Monday, adding the pandemic has the potential to be "culturally devastating."

Behn Smith, who is Eh Cho Dene from the Fort NelsonFirst Nation, said Monday's announcement was an "excellent" step towarda higher level of care for Indigenous communities.

She added robust tracking, "using both western and Indigenous data," is required to determine whether pandemic responses are meeting patients' needsin culturally sensitive ways.

If you have a COVID-19-related story we should pursue that affects British Columbians, please email us atimpact@cbc.ca