Image Credit: CFJC Today / File
Sound Off

SOUND OFF: Health Minister hides as health care continues to teeter under his watch

Jul 21, 2022 | 4:01 PM

THE BC LIBERALS have long been calling for action to resolve B.C.’s health care crisis, including the ongoing situation at Royal Inland Hospital (RIH) in Kamloops. Unfortunately, the ‘action’ announced by Health Minister Adrian Dix this week is nothing but a series of band-aid measures with shaky timelines.

Dix came to Kamloops on Monday but tried his level best to avoid media as well as local doctors and nurses. His ‘media availability’ was to be by teleconference only — so why bother coming to Kamloops at all? If he wanted to hide from reporters, he should have stayed in his home riding in Vancouver. Eventually, and I’m guessing reluctantly, his team allowed two Kamloops reporters into the boardroom.

It makes you wonder why the much-anticipated opening of the new $417 million patient tower wasn’t met with much fanfare by the NDP government. A closed-door boardroom Q&A instead of a grand opening news conference? It’s further proof the Health Minister is afraid of being confronted about the deteriorating state of health care in Kamloops and area.

This must be why he also apparently refused to sit down with doctors or nurses, especially those in the hardest-hit departments of the ICU and ER. Nurses in particular have been demanding a direct discussion with the minister to talk about the retention plan and what they describe as ‘toxic’ working conditions — but he won’t do it.

Dix was repeatedly questioned by reporters about how the new tower will be staffed, but he and Interior Health CEO Susan Brown would not provide specifics. Both claimed the new facility would be an attractive recruiting tool for workers. But how can anyone have any faith that the new patient care tower will have a full complement of staff, considering the situation as it stands today? A nurse speaking anonymously to the Vancouver Sun shared that the hospital’s ER had only four nurses out of the expected 12 this past weekend. She also revealed her own department was operating at 60 per cent of baseline staffing levels.

As for some of the other issues at the hospital, the minister did announce three additional operating rooms for RIH, but they won’t be operational until 2023 which doesn’t offer the immediate help that patients and health care workers are seeking now. While the BC Liberals have repeatedly called for a health human resources strategy, the NDP still haven’t come up with one.

They also haven’t come up with any solutions to the family doctor shortage plaguing the province, nor to the frequent emergency room closures in rural communities like Ashcroft and Clearwater. This past weekend, six ERs around the province were temporarily shut down which is completely unacceptable.

There’s also no sign of the repeatedly-promised but never-delivered cancer centre for Kamloops, which is still in the concept stage; not funded; and lacking an actual plan to be built and open by October 2024 as the Premier committed to in the last election.

These are the reasons why Minister Dix opted for a low-key visit behind closed doors instead of the grand opening celebration that the completion of a large infrastructure project usually warrants. The announcements he offered this week were thin gruel for the people of Kamloops who, like all British Columbians, are desperate for immediate and effective solutions to the crisis in health care.