Veterinarians in southeast B.C. join forces to preserve emergency care amid staffing shortage - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:59 AM | Calgary | -13.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Veterinarians in southeast B.C. join forces to preserve emergency care amid staffing shortage

Almost every night after midnight, Uli Helvoigt gets phone calls about injured or sick animals that need help. She has banded together with other vets to make sure sick animals in the East Kootenays have care.

East Kootenay vets say there is too much work for just one clinic to take

Uli Helvoigt, owner of Tanglefoot Veterinary Services, takes a blood sample from a dog. She says her employees were becoming exhausted from regularly responding to overnight emergencies, so the clinic halted 24/7 care. (Brendan Coulter/CBC )

Almost every night after midnight, Uli Helvoigt gets phone calls about injured or sick animals that need help.

But the veterinarian, who owns Tanglefoot Veterinary Services in Cranbrook, B.C., says she's forced to turn away people and their pets every day as demand surges.

"It just never ends," said Helvoigt. "The phone never stops ringing."

In April, her clinic announcedit could no longer offer round-the-clockemergency care as shortages of vetsand veterinary technologists made it impossible to offer uninterrupted services.

But Helvoigt has now partnered with six other clinicsin the East Kootenayregion so residents can continue to access overnight emergency care.

The East Kootenay Veterinary Group, made up of clinics in Cranbrook, Kimberley, Fernie, Creston, Invermere and Golden, is making at least one veterinarian available on call overnight every night in southeast B.C.

After-hours calls will beassessed by a technician directing callers to the nearest on-call clinic.

Veterinarian Jasmine Hardy rewards a good boy with a treat for co-operating during an ultrasound scan at Tanglefoot. ( Brendan Coulter/CBC)

Helvoigt admits forcing people to drive hours at night to access services isn't ideal, but she says her clinic had no choice.

"We never have enough people to do the things we need to do," she said.

Veterinarian shortages continue

Across B.C., staffing shortages in veterinary clinics have existed for yearsbut gotworse during the pandemic as demand surgedwith more people adoptingpets, leading to burnout among many in the profession.

Shortages are particularly acute in rural areas where it's harder to attract workers, according to the Society of B.C. Veterinarians.

Tanglefoot practice manager Jeff Cooper said the "staffing crisis" had meant the clinic could no longer offer continuous service, with staff responding to 700 emergencies in the last 10 months.

"It was just way too much work for one clinic to take on," he said.

"We can't afford to burn out our team."

The East Kootenay Veterinary Group is not the province's first veterinary call-sharing system created to ensure the availability of overnight services. A group of five clinics in Kamloops work together to make sure there's always a vet on call.

Larger cities like Victoria, Vancouver and Kelowna, meanwhile, have 24-hour veterinary hospitals.

The staff at Tanglefoot Veterinary Services are now partnering with staff at six other clinics in the East Kootenay so residents can continue to access emergency after-hours care. (Brendan Coulter/CBC)

Uncertain future for overnight care

The province has announced it's doubling the number of subsidized seats in veterinary college to address the shortage of animal doctors. This fall, 40 B.C. students attending the Western College of Veterinary Medicine in Saskatoon will receive support.

Rob McLeod, a vet at Creston Veterinary Hospital, one of the East Kootenay Veterinary Group clinics, says more resources need to be allocated to make sure emergency services are available in rural B.C.

"Right now, it's depending on the willingness of veterinarians to provide it," he said.

McLeod does expect sharing resources will help with recruiting veterinarians to the East Kootenay and said he's optimistic the partnership will keep overnight services available to locals and their furry friends in the long run.

"This can't be anything but a positive thing," he said.


CBC British Columbia has launched aCranbrook bureauto helptell the stories of the Kootenayswith reporterBrendan Coulter. Story ideas and tips can be sent tobrendan.coulter@cbc.ca.