NDP to introduce legislation requiring monthly reports on Nova Scotia's ERs - Action News
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Nova Scotia

NDP to introduce legislation requiring monthly reports on Nova Scotia's ERs

The NDP is planning to bring the proposed Emergency Room Accountability Act forward later this week when MLAs return for the spring session of the legislature.

Party leader Gary Burrill calls for more 'openness, transparency and scrutiny'

NDP Leader Gary Burrill announced details of the proposed Emergency Room Accountability Act on Tuesday at Province House. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

Nova Scotia's opposition New Democrats plan to introducelegislation this week that would force the province to report on the state of emergency rooms every month.

"It's an act that would require the government to track and publicly report on a monthly basis the number and percentage of patients to be admitted to emergency rooms who do not have a family doctor," said party leader Gary Burrill.

The NDP plansto bring the proposed Emergency Room Accountability Act forward later this week when MLAs return for the spring session of the legislature.

Burrill saida freedom of information request made by his party showed an alarming increase in people going to emergency rooms who don't have a doctor. The numbers, from 2013 to 2018, show a 112 per centincrease provincewide under the Liberal government.

An emergency department sign is shown.
The emergency room entrance at Dartmouth General Hospital. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

The highest increase was at the Valley Regional Hospital in Kentville at almost 265 per cent. There were also significant jumps at theColchester East Hants Health Centre in Truro and the Dartmouth General Hospital, where increases were recorded of 257 per cent and 217 per cent, respectively.

"This is the level of openness, transparency and scrutiny that is required across the breadth of the crisis in the emergency care system," said Burrill. "The purpose of this act is to make it law in Nova Scotia."

The proposed legislation would include the IWK Health Centre in Halifax and hospitals under the Nova Scotia Health Authority.

The NDP saidthere would be no additional cost to monitor the monthly information. The freedom of information request shows the numbers are already being tracked, the party said.

N.S. health minister responds

Nova Scotia Health Minister Randy Delorey saidhe'll wait to hear exactly what the NDP's legislation entails before makinga judgment, but he pointedout the numbers provided through the freedom of information requestmay not paint the most accurate picture.

"As I understand the data that was brought forward today, it makes reference to visits," Delorey said. "It's important to recognize a visit may be one person who has multiple visits to an emergency department."

Health Minister Randy Delorey said the government is committed to hiring more doctors and primary care providers. (CBC)

He added the data released by the NDP doesn't explainwhy a patient is in the emergency room.

"For example, a patient shows up at the hospital in cardiac distress, whether they have a physician, a primary care provider or not, they're supposed to be in the emergency department," Delorey said.

"And so there's nothing in that data set that was released today that gives any consideration to the clinical symptoms or diagnosis or services that were offered."

The Nova Scotia Health Authority saiddoctor recruitment to help ease the strain on ERs is ongoing.

With files from Anjuli Patil