Health authority shutting down one of Winnipeg's QuickCare clinics - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 04:09 AM | Calgary | -1.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Health authority shutting down one of Winnipeg's QuickCare clinics

The doors are being shut at one of Winnipeg's QuickCare clinics.

Clinics are staffed by registered nurses and nurse practitioners who diagnose, treat minor ailments

Jeanette Edwards, regional director of primary health care for the WRHA, meets with reporters on Friday about the closure of the St. Mary's Road QuickCare Clinic. (Brett Purdy/CBC)

The doors are being shut at one of Winnipeg's QuickCare clinics.

The lease for the clinic on St. Mary's Road will expire at the end of January and not be renewed, the Progressive Conservative government said on Friday. The clinic's last day will be Jan. 27.

Health Minister Kelvin Goertzen said a lack of staffing has been an issue at the city's six QuickCare clinics, resulting in rotating closures.

"You wouldn't go to a restaurant if it was closed 30 per cent of the time. People don't want to go to a QuickCare Clinic if it's closed when it shouldn't be closed," he said.

Goertzen said staff at the St. Mary's Road clinic will be re-deployed to the other ones.

The clinics were a project of the previous NDP provincial government.

They are staffed by registered nurses and nurse practitioners who diagnose and treat minor health issues, helping people avoid unnecessary trips to an emergency room and freeing up doctors from dealing with those ailments.

This QuickCare Clinic on St. Mary's Road at Horace Street will be closed down at the end of January. (Google Street View)
Once the St. Mary's location is closed, there will be five QuickCare Clinics in Winnipeg, as well as one in Steinbach and one in Selkirk.

"This shift will help address the rotating closures at Winnipeg QuickCareclinics that resulted from challenges related to staff vacancies and provide all community residents a reliable, non-urgent health service outside of regular clinic hours," states a release from the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority.

The clinics were supposed to ease wait times at emergency rooms but Manitoba still has the longest wait times in the country, Goertzen said, adding that all other QuickCareclinics are also being reviewed.

"It has been clear for some time that a change needed to be made in order to best serve Winnipeggers accessing QuickCareclinics," said Jeanette Edwards, regional director of primary health care for the WRHA.

"It has been challenging to recruit sufficient numbers of nurse practitioners to staff six clinics which has resulted in closures and inconsistency of access. When the lease [for the St. Mary's Road location] came up for renewal the decision to move towards closing this location now was practical from a property management perspective."

Edwards said the closure well help stabilizethe QuickCareclinic system,allowing the remaining clinics to provide service 365 days a year. She added that the closure will not result in immediate savings, but the WRHA will avoid costs by not having to pay for the lease.

"Winnipeggers can count on the five sites being open and will have much more readily accessible service at that time," she said.

The doors are being shut at one of Winnipeg's QuickCare clinics

8 years ago
Duration 1:38
They were supposed to be a solution to crowded emergency rooms. But the Pallister government is shutting down one of Winnipeg's six quickcare clinics.