“in 10 years, we could look back and say, ‘wow, this destroyed rural ontario’s health system,”’ he said.
“whether it’s a tourist or whether it’s a farmer, or whether it’s a factory worker … we need the er there. we need to have them here.”
glen mcneil, warden for huron county, sought to reassure residents that when a hospital temporarily closes its er, there is another nearby to accommodate patients.
but, he said, with no foreseeable end to staffing shortages and in order to support remaining workers, local hospitals are venturing into a “new norm.”
“there will be hospitals that will have emergency rooms open 24 hours a day, they just may not be as close as they’ve been in the past,” said mcneil, who serves as board chair for the alexandra marine and general hospital.
“we must support our staff, preserve our staff, and we may do business differently.”
health-care spending was expected to be a top agenda item as canada’s premiers gather in victoria this week for two days of meetings. the premiers are pushing the federal government to increase its share of health-care spending from 22 to 35 per cent.
the head of southwestern ontario’s perth county, where two hospital ers temporarily closed this weekend due to staffing shortages, said money “is not the only answer.”