Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Montreal

Staff shortage forces temporary closure of Lakeshore Hospital psychiatric unit

Those coming to the Lakeshore General Hospital in Montreal's West Island for emergency psychiatric care will be sent to the Douglas Institute in Verdun instead due to a provincewide shortage of psychiatrists.

Patients seeking emergency care will be transferred to the Douglas Institute in Verdun

Those coming to the Lakeshore General Hospital in Montreal's West Island for emergency psychiatric care will be sent to the Douglas Institute in Verdun instead due to a provincewide shortage of psychiatrists. (Charles Contant/CBC)

A lack of staff at the Lakeshore General Hospital in Montreal's West Island has forced the temporary closure of its psychiatric unit,with services moving to Verdun until more personnel can be hired.

The West Island regional health authoritysays the ward is feeling the effects of a provincewide shortage of psychiatrists currently operating with about six of the nineit needs to maintain full service and provide the 24-hour resources some patients need.

As a result, the psychiatric unit closed its doors on Friday. Those seeking emergency care will now be triaged at the hospital and thentransferredto the Douglas Institute, along with all those currently receiving care at Lakeshore.

Dr.Gustavo Turecki, chief of psychiatry at theCIUSSS de l'Ouest-de-l'le-de-Montral, says the Douglas has the capacity to take on extra patients and it's the best solution considering the staffing issues.

"We've done a re-organization of services to better provide continuity of care to the population of the West Island," saidTurecki.

"There is no stop of any of the services that the population needs."

Patientcare still a concern

But Kristina Hoare, vice-president of theFdration interprofessionnelle de la sant du Qubec(FIQ) in the West Island, the union advocating for workers at Lakeshore,says she'sconcerned about how the transferwill affect patients.

"You come to the Lakeshore to get help and then they tell you we'll triage you, we'll see what's going on, then we'll probably direct you to another institution," said Hoare.

"It causes a lot of stress and, of course, as psychiatric nurses, they always have that in the back of their head:how is my patient going to react when I say this to them?"

Paul Brunet, head of the Quebec Council for the Protection of Patients, says he understands the pressure the hospital is under, but he too is worried about the effects the closure will have on patients in distress.

He says many West Islanders dealing with mental health issues are accustomed to going to Lakeshore for help. With the ward now closed, he fears some peoplewill forego getting the care they need if they can't get the kind they're used to.

"Tragedies will occur when these people can't get the adequate help they need," said Brunet."I don't know what we're going to do, butthis is a crisis if not a tragedy in motion.

Hoaresays she's received few details about the closure, including when to expect the unit to reopen.She's expecting to be able to relay more news to Lakeshore workers on Monday.

The CIUSSS saysonce it recruits more psychiatrists to Lakeshore, services will return.

Based on reporting by Sharon Yonan-Renold