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British Columbia

Kamloops parent worries prenatal care now a long drive away

Health-care providers are nowtelling some expectant parents they may haveto travel up to two hoursto communities in the Shuswap and Okanagan to get care, or go to the Royal Inland Hospital emergency department.

Clinic providing birthing services in Kamloops nowhas a monthly cap on deliveries

Dark haired smiling woman with a white toque stands on a snowy hill in front of mountains
Jenny Jones is expecting her first child in July. But as she nears 20 weeks of pregnancy, the Kamloops, B.C., resident faces losing local prenatal care. (Submitted by Jenny Jones)

Living in acity like Kamloops, B.C., Jenny Jones never imaginedshemight have to leave town to get care during her pregnancy.

But without a midwife as of next week,she will have limited options for the remainder of her prenatal care.

Currently, expectant parents in the cityare able to access early-stage care through the First Steps Early Pregnancy Triage Clinicbut after 20 weeks,their doctor or midwife refers them to theThompson Region Family Obstetrics (TRFO) Group.

TRFO, located within Royal Inland Hospital (RIH), is the primary provider of birthing services in Kamloops, whoseteam consists of doctors, medical residentsand midwives. The clinic supportson average about 600-700 deliveries per year from across the Thompson region, according to Interior Health numbers from June 2023.

But it's nowset a monthly cap on the number of babies its team can deliver, followingprevious concerns over workloadandsubsequent changes that aimed to ease those pressures.

Interior Health has confirmed that some patients with low-risk pregnancies have been declined prenatal care with TRFO.

Jones is nearly 19 weeks into her pregnancy, but she's not confident her referral will be accepted as her midwife hands off care for the remainder of her pregnancy.

"Basically, they'll recommend me to the maternity clinic here, but the likelihood of me being accepted is very, very small," said Jones, who is expecting her first child in July.

Front of a red building with a sign that reads Royal Inland Hospital
The entrance of Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops, B.C., is pictured. Expectant parents who aren't able to access the Thompson Region Family Obstetrics Group are being advised to go to the hospital's emergency department for prenatal care. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

Some health-care providers are nowtellingpeople like Jones they may haveto travel up to two hoursto communities in the Shuswap and Okanagan to get care, or go to the RIH emergency department.

While a number of smaller rural communities in B.C. struggle with maternal care, Kamloops is a regional hub with a population of more than 100,000, that also servesthe medical needs of more than a dozencommunities in the Chilcotin, Cariboo, Nicola Valley, North Thompsonand North Shuswapregions.

But Jones says she's been told by her current midwifethat if she's not directly connected to amaternity clinic, there is little certainty about what care options will be available for her in the city.

"You would just have to wait in emergency for however long it would take," she said, adding that even getting treatmentthere would depend on whetherthere is a doctor on callwho deals in maternity care.

"You still might be turned away to go to Salmon Arm, Vernon or Kelowna."

Interior Health has toldpeople who are not patients of TRFOthattheyshould first try go to the Kamloops emergency department or the maternity ward, depending on how far along they are in their pregnancy.

Woman with shoulder length grey hair and a black jacket
Lisa Zetes-Zanatta, who oversees the rural, acute and community operations in the Thompson and Cariboo Regions for Interior Health, acknowledges there are shortages in care for expectant parents. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

CBC News has made repeated requests for comment from TRFOabout its care plan, including specifics on its cap on patients, but has yet to hear back.

In an interview with CBClast year, TRFO spokesperson Dr. Sean Davis said everyone acknowledges there's an overall shortage of providers.

"It's not like any doctor can do maternity care," he said, adding there werea number of compounding problems affecting maternal care including compensation, physician recruitmentand administrative support.

A challenge Canada-wide

Interior Health said it is working to address capacity gaps in the current system.

Lisa Zetes-Zanatta,the health authority'sexecutive director of clinical operations for rural, acute and community for the Thompson and Caribooregions, said while the situation is heartbreaking, there are options for expectant parents.

"We don't want anybody to not have care," she said.

At RIH, there are a number of physician and specialist vacancies, meaning fill-in doctors are being brought in to cover for departments like maternity and obstetrics and gynecology.

Black sign with white text in hospital entrance
A directory is seen at the Royal Inland Hospital, directing patients to obstetric services, the emergency department, and other health-care services. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

"In both areas, we have locums that are supporting while we're in the process of recruitment, so that poses a challenge and a risk and this is a challenge that we have nationally," said Zetes-Zanatta.Research has shown that more has been neededto increase access to maternal care in Canadafor nearly a decade.

Zetes-Zanattasaid while there are shortages in many areas, some places in the Interior Health region are fully staffed, giving those sites more capacity to do deliveries.

She said she wantedto reassure expectant parents that RIH always has capacity for low-risk deliveries. Last year, there were1,095 deliveries at the hospital.

Zetes-Zanatta also suggests people get on the waitlist for a family doctor.

Interior Health said it is meeting bi-weekly with TRFO to come up with options.

"It's going to take a village in this one. It takes more providers than we have right now and it really does take a multi-disciplinary approach and that's what we're looking at to determine how we can extend the care," said Zetes-Zanatta.

Marlene Titus had a traumatic experience giving birth, and says it could have been better if Royal Inland Hospital was fully staffed.

In the meantime, Jones is working to secureongoingprenatal care and a location that has capacity to deliver her baby, and has plans to reach out to doctors in surrounding communities.

"You are more or less left out on your own," she said.

The gap in care is making her question her decision to move to Kamloopsin the first place nearly two years ago.

"We had the option of moving elsewhere ... knowing what the outcome would be, we probably would have gone to another place."