ER closures across N.L. mean last year's problems will only get worse in 2023, health-care providers say - Action News
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ER closures across N.L. mean last year's problems will only get worse in 2023, health-care providers say

Multiple emergency rooms in Eastern Health and Central Health were temporarily closed for the first few days of the new year. Three health-care professionals say the closures are symptomatic of larger issues.

Multiple emergency rooms across N.L. shut down over the holidays

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Multiple emergency rooms in central and eastern Newfoundland closed over the holidays. The emergency room in Whitbourne has been closed since June. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

As the clock struck midnighton New Year's Eve, six emergency rooms in central and eastern Newfoundland were closed due to staffing shortages.

The closures marked the culmination of a year when emergency rooms in some rural communities began closing more frequentlyand Newfoundland and Labrador's health authorities relied more heavily on virtual care.

The emergency room in New-Wes-Valley has been closed since last weekand is scheduled to remain closed until at least Wednesday. Michael Tiller, who doubles as both a paramedic and the town's mayor, said the impact has been "tremendous."

"If you don't have the foundation of a strong health-care system, it affects your town; it affects your region," he said.

Whenthe emergency room in New-Wes-Valley closes, Tiller said, paramedics are forced to drive patients anextra hour and a half to Gander where they might take hours to offload patients because that hospital is so busy.

He said the deterioration of health-care services at the health centre in New-Wes-Valley is distressingfor residents, health-care workers and municipal leaders alike.

"It's heartbreaking to see what that facility has become compared to what it was when we had our five doctors," he said. "That facility has saved a lot of lives, it's treated a lot of people, made a lot of people comfortable."

Tiller said the town has a meeting with Health Minister Tom Osborne on Thursday.

2,700 residents, one health-care provider

On Bell Island, where the emergency room shut down for six days from Dec. 24 to Jan. 2,pharmacist Kara O'Keefesaid shefound herself acting as the sole health-care providerfor about 2,700 people. Patients called, wondering what to do about shortness of breath and other problems.

"When you're the only person who's available for that many patients, you're expected to take on jobs that are not really yours," she said.

A woman with red hair standing in front of a pharmacy.
Kara O'Keefe was the only medical practitioner on Bell Island when the emergency room closed over the holidays. (Patrick Butler/Radio-Canada)

O'Keefe said communities on Bell Island seehigher co-morbidities and higher rates of chronic illnesses.

"When you close down an emergency room and access to a physician in a community of 2,700 people with an aging population, that can lead to some pretty severe health outcomes," she said.

She said Eastern Health has two ambulances on call on Bell Island to pick up patients, but those patients then have to take a ferry to Portugal Cove-St. Philip's before going to St. John's. O'Keefe said the journey can take an hour or two on a good day and that doesn't account for weather delays.

Though pharmacists can't be expected to take on the responsibilities of other health-care professionals, O'Keefe said, they could play a larger role in the province's health-care system.

"We have young health-care professionals who are graduating with the skills to common ailments that don't necessarily need to be in an emergency room or a primary care clinic," she said.

'We need a plan'

The emergency room in Springdale is closed until Wednesday. Dr. Todd Young, lead physician at the Green Bay Health Centre, said recent closures are due to a shortage of both nurses and doctors.

"It's a huge impact," he said.

A person in a blue suit with a stethoscope around his neck stands in a parking lot in front of a building.
Dr. Todd Young, lead physician at Green Bay Health Centre, said staff shortages are worse than this time last year. (Colleen Connors/CBC )

Young said the emergency room in Springdale has gotten busier in the last year, the emergency room saw about 7,500 visits, compared with 4,800 two years ago.

"What that tells us is both the scope andthe demand itself is certainly increasing," he said.

When other emergency rooms like the one in Baie Verteclose, that adds pressure to the emergency room in Springdale.

He said a shortage of nurses in Springdale caught him off guard only six out of 15 nursing positions at the Green Bay Health Centre are filled. He said the facility needs a clear plan for nurse and physician recruitment.

"2023 is actually starting off a little worse than last year, and that is quite disheartening."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador