ER doctor acknowledges queue jumping occurred - Action News
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Edmonton

ER doctor acknowledges queue jumping occurred

An Edmonton emergency room doctor told Alberta's queue-jumping inquiry Wednesday of a request to move a VIP to the front of the line.

Medical queue-jumping inquiry

12 years ago
Duration 3:00
CBC's Briar Stewart reports from the Alberta inquiry into allegations of queue-jumping and preferential medical treatment for VIP patients

An emergency room doctor told Alberta's queue-jumping inquiryWednesday of a request to move a VIP to the front of the line.

Emergency room Dr. Paul Parks told Alberta's queue-jumping inquiry of a request to move a VIP to the front of the line. (CBC)

Dr. Paul Parks was testifying at the inquiry looking into whether some prominent Albertans were allowed to get preferential treatment in the health-care system.

"The executive on call called down to the triage nurse and essentially indicated that there was aVIP in the waiting room and that VIP should be moved into an emergency department bed immediately and taken care of," he told the inquiry.

The VIP was examined by a nurse and a waiting-room physician at the request of the "executive on call," or senior administrator,andput back into the queue, Parks said.

On the day in questionin November2007, the ER was overcrowded with patients, some who had been waiting up to four or five hours, he said.

"We had a lot of very sick patients in our waiting room, staff were trying to move into the emergency department, "Parks said.

Parks says there was consensus among the emergency group that they could not entertain requests for preferential access and must see patients based on medical need.

The executive on call hadpreviously shown no understanding of how overcrowded the emergency department was, how dangerouslyunsafeit was, northe processes of trying to find beds in the hospital, Parks said.

The inquiry continues this week.