ROTHENBURGER: Child’s death highlights urban-rural divide in health care
TWO UNPLEASANT SIDE EFFECTS of the sad state of our healthcare system have been highlighted in tragic fashion.
A story came out yesterday about an eight-month-old Barriere child who suffered a cardiac arrest. An ambulance was called but the child died.
The ambulance had to travel from Kamloops because all available ambulances were busy there, though it’s not known whether the child would have survived had an ambulance arrived sooner.
Barriere Mayor Ward Stamer, always forthright, is quoted by media as saying this: “We need our ambulance service to be there to protect the people when we need it and not to steal our resources so that they can go to a larger centre.”


