District of 100 Mile House proposes short-term solution to healthcare challenges, looks for provincial support
100 MILE HOUSE, B.C. — Last year, the emergency department at the 100 Mile House District General Hospital was closed on 28 separate occasions, totalling nearly 16 full days of no emergency services in the community. Through the first week of 2026, the ER has already been shuttered twice due to physician shortages. Despite the challenges and abundance of recent closures, the district says there is increased stability ahead.
It’s a long trip to Williams Lake for patients and families when the 100 Mile House emergency department is closed. The ER reopened Monday (Jan. 5) night after its second closure of the year. The issue has been tied to physician shortages, leaving the district fighting other communities for new hires.
“We know the work-life balance for doctors has really shifted and that is part of the shortage of doctors. People aging out is part of the shortage of doctors. That is what happened in our community — we went from 15 to nine in, like, two years because they decided it was time to retire,” said 100 Mile House Mayor Maureen Pinkney. “We are short doctors, like everywhere else in B.C., but the few who we have don’t all work in the ER. Of the ones who do work in the ER, we have a couple who are on leave right now and that is what has prompted all these end-of-year multiple closures.”


