Vancouver Island emergency room latest to face temporary closure due to staff shortage - Action News
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British ColumbiaSITUATION CRITICAL

Vancouver Island emergency room latest to face temporary closure due to staff shortage

The emergency room at Port Alberni's West Coast General Hospital could potentially be closed through much ofAugust and September due to staff shortages the latest in a series of temporary ER shutdowns in small communities.

Island Health said closures at West Coast General Hospital's ER would occur 'as a last resort'

Two paramedics remove a person in a gurney from an ambulance in a parking lot.
The potential closure of an emergency room in Port Alberni in Vancouver Island is the latest in a series of temporary shutdowns in small communities. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

This story is part ofSituation Critical,a series from CBC British Columbia reporting on the barriers people in this province face in accessing timely and appropriate health care.

A stylized phrase reading 'SITUATION CRITICAL', made to read like a red heartbeat monitor.

The emergency room at Port Alberni's West Coast General Hospital (WCGH) on Vancouver Island could be closed through much ofAugust and September due to ongoing staffing shortages, CBC News has learned.

An employee atWCGH, speaking on condition of confidentiality, warns the ER could be closed for eight-hour periods a day if asolution is not found to fill shifts at the hospital. While the ER is currently operating, the employee said it has narrowly avoided closures in July.

The ERin Port Alberniservices a town of over 18,000, and typically receives between 60and 80visits per day.

The employee, a health professional, said if the ER does close, people would need to travel an hour and 15 minutes to Nanaimo, or nearly two hours to Tofinofor emergency care resulting in a three-hour period when an ambulance would be unavailable for other calls in the community.

The Port Alberni Fire department and the police detachment said they've been notified of the potential disruption.

Island Health said in a statement there are currently no planned disruptions at WCGH, and that a closure would occur "asa last resort[...] after every possible mitigation strategy is explored and exhausted."

The Port Alberni emergency room services a town of over 18,000and typically receives between 60and 80of visits per day. (Google Maps)

"Island Health is actively working to ensure the availability of emergency services in the Alberni Valley region and beyond," the statement read in part.

An ER closure in Port Alberniwould be the latest in a series of temporary ER shutdowns in small communities.

Earlier in the spring, emergency rooms in Port McNeill in the island's northregion as well as the province's Interior and northeastclosed on short notice because physicians were not available to fill shifts.

As recently as Monday, the ERinMerritt'sNicola Valley Hospital in the Interiorclosed on short noticeafter an ER physician called in sick. It re-openedat 8 a.m. the next day.

InteriorHealth directed people needing emergency care to access Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops, or Kelowna General Hospital,about an hourto an hour-and-a-half drive away.

Speaking at an unrelated press conference on Monday, Health Minister Adrian Dix said he was aware of the closure in Merritt, but did not comment directly on potential closures in Port Alberni.

"We're going to continue doing what we've been doing which is hiring and building resources out in our health-care system," he said.

"We are asking our health-care system to do more and the health-care system is responding."

Doctors 'in their darkest hour'

Dr. Ramneek Dosanjh, president ofDoctors of B.C., said the closures are "incredibly concerning" for both health-care providers and patients, and illustrate a lack of equity inhealth-care settings in rural and urban communities.

"The emergency room setting is usually a life-saving measure, and if we're saying that we can't have that, can't provide that to a community, what kind of care are we saying we can provide? This is devastating in a country such as ours and a province such as ours," she said.

"It shouldn't matter if you're sitting in Terrace orDawsonCreek or Port Alberni or Merritt you should be able to access timely care and intervention."

Dosanjh said two years into the pandemic and six years into the toxic drug crisis, doctors across the province are facing burnout and unprecedented burdens on their mental health.

"This is not an easy thingfor doctors not to show up, or nurses not to come in, these are decisions being made in their darkest hour," said Dosanjh.

According to the WCGH employee, keeping the emergency room in Port Alberniopen would require physicians to work 12- to 16-hour shifts for multiple weeks in a row a workload doctors are simply unable to take on.

'We can't pull physicians out of thin air'

Merritt Mayor Linda Brown said when a physician calls in sick, there is little the city can do to keep the ER running. The city also has limited capacity to work on hiringand retaining doctors.

"There isn't anything we can do in this point in time. We can't pull physicians out of thin air. We have to deal with it as a community," said Brown.

"We're not in a position to attract nurses and doctors at this point in time, we rely on our overall health-care system to provide them for us."

Around four hours northwest of Port Alberni, Port McNeillMayor Gaby Wickstrom said her community is bracing for more disruptions to emergency room services over the summer.

Port McNeillHospital has in recent months had its emergency room temporarily closed, or on diversion meaning walk-ins at the emergency room are treated, whilepatients arriving in an ambulance are redirected to Port Hardy, half an hour away.

"We're always concerned because we're at minimal staffing without any extras," said Wickstrom, adding that in a rural community,having even one health-care worker out sick can result in a closure.

She said asimultaneous closure of the Port Hardy and Port McNeill emergency rooms would see patients redirected to Campbell River, two hours away.

"We have been told that from time to time we may end up with either a diversion or a closure because it's just the nature of the staffing crisis that we're in," she said.

"It's probably going to go on for a few months, it's not an overnight fix."

With files from Kathryn Marlow