Acadian Peninsula mobilizing against proposed Vitalit bed cuts - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 15, 2024, 04:14 PM | Calgary | 0.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Acadian Peninsula mobilizing against proposed Vitalit bed cuts

Some people in northern New Brunswick are mobilizing after hearing that Vitalit Health Network has recommended hospital bed cuts to the provincial government.

According to Radio-Canada, close to 100 hospital beds could be cut in health network

Vitalite bed cuts

9 years ago
Duration 1:48
Bridget Yard reports on proposed bed cuts to Vitalite Health network

Some people in northern New Brunswick are mobilizing after hearing thatVitalit Health Network has recommended hospital bed cuts to the provincial government.

According to information obtained by Radio-Canada, the health network has submitted a proposal to Health Minister Victor Boudreau that would cut 99 of Vitalit's 1161 hospital beds.
One hundred people showed up to a public meeting to discuss possible hospital bed cuts in Acadie-Bathurst on Oct. 15 (Radio-Canada)

The Acadie-Bathurst region would be hit the hardest if changes are implemented, standing to lose 41 beds.

The recommendation spawned public meetings last week. One meeting in Tracadie, hosted by a concerned citizens committee, attracted one hundred people.

"We felt that with our population, a 45,000population, we need more beds, not less beds," said organizer Norma McGraw, a former healthcare worker.
Concerned citizens committee president Norma McGraw worries seniors will have nowhere to go if 41 hospital beds are lost from Acadie-Bathurst

"Unless we put something else in placeto replace those beds, we won't be able to take care of our elderly."

We don't want just to be told there will be cuts. We want to be part of it. We want to be part of the solution.- Norma McGraw, concerned citizens committee

The committee has written letters to Social Development MinisterCathy Rogers, and Health Minister VictorBoudreau.

McGraw says she spoke withBoudreau, who told her no decision would be made until next spring's provincial budget.

"We hope that we'll be consulted by the government. That's what we want. We don't want just to be told there will be cutsWe want to be part of the solution, " said McGraw.

Mayors of the region are also calling for clarification on specific plans that Vitalit, so far, has refused to acknowledge.

Vitalit CEO Gilles Lanteigne released a video to employees to respond to the media attention surrounding the possible cuts, and issued an email statement to media outlets explaining Vitalit's position.

The statement saysVitalit Health Network has submitted a package of proposals to the department of health to "transform and modernize New Brunswick's health care system."

The statement saysthetransformation "would be spread out over a number of years" with the objective of making"the shift to ambulatory care and ensure increased accessibility to care and services."

The statement refers to changes coming to healthcare in New Brunswick, but does not suggest what those changes might be.

Tracadie mayor Aldoda Losier and other mayors from the Acadian Peninsula want the health network to provide a more complete explanation of the proposed changes in the region's healthcare (CBC News)
Tracadie mayor Aldoda Losier is one of several community leaders on the Acadian Peninsula calling for more transparency from the health network.

"What we want to know from the communitieslike Caraquet, Shippaganand the north, what do you have in the plan for the next five,10years to replace this reduction," he said.

Losier and the other mayors of the Acadian Peninsula plan to hold a meeting with the region's six provincial MLAs to find out more about the recommendations.

Vitalit has scheduled a meeting in Tracadie with community stakeholders for Nov. 2.