Province drops overnight ER hours in major repurposing of 6 hospitals - Action News
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New Brunswick

Province drops overnight ER hours in major repurposing of 6 hospitals

The province says it will cut emergency-room operating hours at six New Brunswick hospitals and convert acute-care beds to long-term care beds in response to a shortage of staff and beds.

120 acute-care beds will become long-term care beds as hospitals are repurposed

Horizon Health Network CEO Karen McGrath, Health Minister Ted Flemming and Vitalit Health Network CEO Gilles Lanteigne announce changes to the role of six New Brunswick hospitals. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

The province says it will cut emergency-room operating hours at six New Brunswick hospitals and convert acute-care beds to long-term care beds in response to a shortage of staff and beds.

Starting March 11, the six emergency roomswill close from midnight to 8a.m. and will not accept patients after 10 p.m., the government announced Tuesday. Patients in need of acute or hospital care will notbe admitted to those hospitals.

Hospitals that areaffected are:

  • Sussex Health Centre.
  • Sackville Memorial Hospital, where surgical services will also close and be shifted to Moncton.
  • Hotel-Dieu of St. Joseph in Perth-Andover.
  • Stella-Maris-de-Kent Hospital in Sainte-Anne-de-Kent.
  • Enfant-Jsus Hospital in Caraquet.
  • Grand Falls General Hospital.

"It should come as no surprise to anyone in this province, that our health-care system, is facing a crisis," said Health Minister Ted Flemming.

"That status quo is simply not acceptable because the status quo leads to deterioration."

The province saidcutting overnight ER hours at the six hospitals will free up more doctors to work during the day, when demand for service is higher.

Anurse practitioner will be added to the day shift at each of these hospitals as well.

In January, the province announced the creation of32 new nurse-practitioner positionsto reduce the burden on hospital emergency departments. Thesix nurse practitioners werepart of that announcement.

Not many visits overnight

"The reality is that on average these emergency departments saw only five patients per night and most of these cases were not emergencies in critical situations such as trauma, heart attacks and strokes," Karen McGrath, CEO of Horizon Health, said of the three Horizon hospitals affected.

Each hospital is also within 75 kilometres of another emergency room in the province.

McGrath and VitalitCEO Gilles Langeigne said a doctor sees 20 to 25 patients on average during the day, and the changes will allow more patients to be seen.

In explaining the switch from acute to long-term care, the CEOs said many of the beds at these hospitals are already being used for that purpose anywayas patients wait an average of 90 days for long-term care beds elsewhere.

Now these units will be renovated, get dining rooms, social activities and recreation.

"This will improve the care that we provide to these patients by reducing the time that they are spending in their beds," the CEOs said. "We hope to keep them healthier longer."

More mental health services

The regional health authorities arealso reviewing "several service areas" to address wait times, aging population, rising demand for mental health services.

Mental health services willbe added to all six hospitals.

The regional health authorities are also looking at a centralized co-ordination and referral system for specialists to reduce surgical wait times across the province, andwhether to continue doing surgeries in these six hospitals.

The new ER hours have already been in effect in Oromocto since 2002.St. Joseph's Hospital in Saint John also has an ER operating on these hours.

According to the release,58 per cent of ER visits in New Brunswick could be addressed by a family doctor or a nurse practitioner. The percentage rises to 70 per cent in smaller hospitals.

Premier's case for change

Premier Blaine Higgs has pointed to 23 different service interruptions in the province last year. He said an aging population, a mental health crisis and a labour shortage in the system mean the system is no longer sustainable the way it is now.

Last fall,Vitalit was forced to close emergency services, surgeries and other servicesat the Campbellton Regional Hospitalbecause of a lack of staff and beds.

Online petitions were already circulating Monday morning in communities such as Sussex and Sackville to defend services at their local hospitals.

And in Caraquet, about 40 people spoke outside the L'Hpital de l'Enfant-Jsus RHSJ, including local Liberal MLA Isabelle Thriault, Acadie-Bathurst Liberal MP Serge Cormier and most members of the town council.

With files from Jacques Poitras