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Nova Scotia

Some Halifax doctors raise alarm about potential for injuries during student street parties

Some medical professionals in Halifax say they're concerned that injuries sustained at street parties in the city could weigh down the already beleaguered health-care system.

Multiple people hurt after jumping off balconies and trees last year, say physicians

Police keep a watchful eye on a street party. A sign from a balcony reads, 'Relax, we are double vaxxed.'
Police kept a watchful eye on a student party in Halifax last year. Dr. Caitlin Lees says several students were injured and needed medical attention during the festivities. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)

Doctors in Halifax are concerned that unsanctioned street parties ringing in the return ofuniversity students could put unnecessary stress on an already strained emergency system.

This comes as the peninsula's universities begin to fill up with students for the start of the school year, including Dalhousie University. Last year,thousands of students took to the streets in partsof central Halifaxto party during the fourth weekend of September.

Dr. Caitlin Lees, a palliative care and internal medicine physician with the Nova Scotia Health Authority, said a massive group of revellers gathered in the Larch Street area last year anda number of people wereinjured afterjumpingfrom balconies and trees. Others needed medical attention due to alcohol intoxication.

The large crowd made it difficult for emergency services to get tostudents who required medical attention and drew in "significant" police resources.

"This year, we know that it's likely to happen again," Lees said. "There's no capacity," she said of Nova Scotia's health-care system.

"An event like this where there's likely to be multiple people requiring hospital admissions or, at least, emergency care for intoxication or injuries fromunsafe behaviour, that has farther-reaching consequences than just for the people in the immediate neighbourhood or for the student that hasinjured themselves."

A crowd of young adults stand in front of a house. The rooftop lights of a police cruiser flash in the foreground.
Halifax Regional Police at a student party on Jennings Street in 2021. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)

The crisis in emergency rooms has been building since before the COVID-19 pandemic began, but staffing shortages combined with fewer family doctors have led to anincreased numberof people seeking care at an ER. Now, emergency rooms across the province are at their limit.

"Emergency services are overwhelmed at this present time," said Dr. George Kovacs, the trauma team leader at the Halifax Infirmary.

"When I say emergency services, we're talking about police, we're talking about pre-hospital paramedics and we're talking about the emergency department."

Injuries 'preventable'

Kovacs echoed Lees' concern about street parties drawingscarce services away from other emergencies.

"Our job is, and always will be, to look after those who need our services that are ill and injured. And we're not there to judge, we're there to look after them. But a lot of these things are preventable."

He expects to see the emergency rooms filled with people who have misused substances if the street parties go ahead.

Dalhousie announced earlier this yearit would create a "collaborative framework" to address "high-risk student behaviour" in the neighborhood around the campus.

On Tuesday, an independent report oncommunity engagement with street party culture outlinedsix recommendations, including improving communication between students, neighbours and other stakeholders, and facilitating more official activities and events around "trouble periods," like fall and St. Patrick's Day.

The report, by non-profit community organization Inspiring Communities, alsorecommendedplacing more garbage bins, portable toilets and cheap food in the area to mitigate damage.

Thousands of young people are shown at a Halifax street party on a dark evening.
Halifax police said thousands of people attended the 2021 Jennings Street party. (Mark Doiron/Radio-Canada)

Dalhousiesaidit's working with Halifax Regional Police to monitor "unsafe student behaviour" ahead of the fall semester.

"Dalhousie does not host a sanctioned homecoming event in the fall and it does not condone any kind of illegal street party,"university spokesperson Janet Brysonsaid in an emailed statement.

"Considerable efforts are made by the university to proactively monitor and communicate the potential risks involving unsafe student behaviour on and off campus, and through regular check-ins with HRP."

Halifax Regional Police Const. John MacLeod said in an email police are currentlydrafting a brochure to "inform students and citizens on common offences and potential consequences." He added that citizens are encouraged to report any concerns about noise, public impairmentand safety.

MacLeod said police do not provide specifics on operational matters, but HRP will be present in university neighbourhoods as students return to "discourage disruptive behaviour."

CBC News reached out to Dalhousie Student Union, but a representative was not available for comment.

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