SOUND OFF: Shuswap health care not a priority for the NDP
AFTER YEARS OF DOCTORS, nurses, patients and the Official Opposition raising alarm bells about the state of health care in British Columbia, Health Minister Adrian Dix has finally decided it’s time for a summer tour of our overwhelmed hospitals. I’m hopeful he’ll make a stop in my riding of Shuswap, where our local health care system continues to deteriorate to the point that doctors themselves are warning about potential risks to patients.
Dr. Scott McKee recently outlined these challenges to Salmon Arm council, noting that the critical care system at Shuswap Lake General Hospital is in jeopardy — with only six physicians on hand to handle emergency and critical care at the hospital on a 24/7 basis. They were so overwhelmed last fall that they were starting to worry the facility wouldn’t be able to continue offering these ICU services altogether.
Other issues that have been raised over the past several months include low morale among staff; nurses leaving; infrastructure erosion and limitations; insufficient training and storage; challenges with infection control, and much more.
In his presentation to council, Dr. McKee pointed to a chronic lack of funding and prioritization in the region, and I couldn’t agree more. Our needs in the Shuswap, though urgent, seem to be continually overlooked and pushed aside by the NDP government and Interior Health.


