Skip to main content

ER Crisis: 221 short stay hospital beds to be funded across province!

Here's a modest victory for supporters of public health care.  The Ministry of Health and LTC announced that London Health Sciences Centre will operate 21 new short-stay beds.  Another 23 hospital will also get such beds.   
The short-stay beds will be located in hospital in-patient wards and only patients admitted through the ER will have access to these beds – where they may stay up to 72 hours before being discharged or transferred to another unit in the hospital. The beds are designed to help improve the flow in ERs.
The Ministry adds the following:
  • Short-stay beds have been introduced in response to the work of Dr. David Walker, Provincial Lead, Alternate Level of Care (ALC), who is helping to ensure that ALC patients receive care in the right setting.
  • Across the province, 221 beds in 24 hospitals will be funded as part of the short-stay program.
This sounds like a positive first step to address dangerously high hospital bed occupancy and the back-ups in the ERs.  For the London news story click here.  No word yet on which other 23 hospitals will receive new beds.  Stay tuned.  

Comments

  1. You can be sure this is only temporary until after the fall elections.

    This proves, without a doubt, hospitals across the province have been cutting beds and frontline staff recklessly and prematurely, prior to having the proper enablers in place, such as adequate LTC beds.

    In Niagara they have cut two ERs and have discovered ER wait times are now way above the provincial average and ambulance offload delays are soaring, basically because of lack of hospital beds and frontline staff.

    Recently to address this serious, potentially dangerous situation, they are implementing Xcess Plan......which is opening up extra beds in the hospital and staffing them.

    To devise this deceitful strategy, they tell us they need the best and the brightest and that is why they must be paid the highest "Sunshine" wages.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for your comment, Pat Scholfield. FYI -- I am beginning to hear of the other 'short stay' bed that are supposed to be funded. A CUPE local leader just emailed me an announcement from Liberal MPP Rick Bartolucci of funding for 9 beds at Sudbury Regional Hospital. My bet is that we will see more of this prior to the election. But if there is a majority government afterwards -- well hold on to your hat. -- Doug

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Ford government fails to respond to 72% increase in COVID inpatient days, deepening the capacity crisis

COVID infections continue to drive up hospital costs and inpatient hospitalizations in Ontario. For the most recent fiscal year (April 1, 2022- March 31, 2023) hospital stays related to COVID cost $1.221 billion, according to new CIHI data.   This is about 4% of total hospital spending, creating a very significant new cost pressure beyond the usual pressures of population growth, aging, inflation, and rising utilization.   Costs for COVID related hospitalizations increased 22.2% in Ontario in 2022/23 from the previous fiscal year, rising from $999 million to $1.221 billion.  That rise is particularly notable as the OMICRON spike of late 2021 and early 2022 had passed by the the 2022/23 fiscal year.   The $222 million increase in COVID hospitalization costs came in the same year as the Ford government cut special COVID funding and, in fact, cut total hospital funding by $156 million.     In total, there were 60,653 COVID hospitalizations...

The long series of failures of private clinics in Ontario

For many years, OCHU/CUPE has been concerned the Ontario government would transfer public hospital surgeries, procedures and diagnostic tests to private clinics. CUPE began campaigning in earnest against this possibility in the spring of 2007 with a tour of the province by former British Health Secretary, Frank Dobson, who talked about the disastrous British experience with private surgical clinics. The door opened years ago with the introduction of fee-for-service hospital funding (sometimes called Quality Based Funding). Then in the fall of 2013 the government announced regulatory changes to facilitate this privatization. The government announced Request for Proposals for the summer of 2014 to expand the role of "Independent Health Facilities" (IHFs).  With mass campaigns to stop the private clinic expansion by the Ontario Health Coalition the process slowed.   But it seems the provincial Liberal government continues to push the idea.  Following a recent second...

The hospital crisis: No capacity, no plan, no end

While Canada has achieved universal public healthcare coverage, that does not mean conservative forces have given up trying to erode that coverage and expand corporate care where it does not currently exist. The battle has become particularly intense in Ontario under the Ford Progressive Conservative government, which is implementing serious cuts to the level of care and moving to bring in for-profit mini-hospitals. Inadequate Staffing.   Less and less of hospital spending is on staff.   Employee compensation as a share of hospital expenditures has consistently shrunk in Ontario. This is not some immutable law of hospital development.  It is in stark contrast with the rest of Canada, where compensation has become a larger share and now accounts for 67.1%. Hospitals in provinces other than Ontario now have 18 percent more staff per capita than hospitals in Ontario. Overall, if Ontario had the same staffing capacity as the other provinces and territories, there would be another...