DON QUIXOTE VS. CITY HALL When an American gets mad, he says "where's my Gun". When a Canadian gets pissed off he says "Where is my pen, I'm going to send a letter to the EDITOR". When the EDITOR won't publish his letter he sets up his own BLOG page. When I received enough support to get a Council Seat the dogma of the establishment became : "Better to have him inside the tent pissing out, than outside pissing in." (Only time will tell !)
Friday, February 10, 2012
Politicians push for more hospital beds
Elected officials toured VJH with physicians and
Interior Health Authority administration Wednesday, and the main focus
was two shelled-in floors that could be used for more acute care beds. “We wanted to see how the tower is working now
that it’s in use and to keep in the forefront that we’d like those two
floors opened,” said Jim Garlick, Coldstream mayor. Physicians, nurses and the public have been
pushing for the two floors to be developed to alleviate congestion,
which has led to patients in hallways and surgeries cancelled. The Ministry of Health says capital and operating funds are an issue, but Garlick insists creative options are needed. “One of the ideas is one of the two floors being a
centre of excellence for joint replacement,” he said, adding many of
those cases now go to Vancouver. Another possibility could be using a floor as a working classroom for University of B.C. medical students. “They need to form a group and come up with something that makes it possible,” said Garlick of IHA and doctors. Also on the tour was Vernon-Monashee MLA Eric Foster. “He’s looking for ways to make this happen,” said
Garlick, adding that he and other civic leaders will also continue to
lobby the provincial government. “We need to be talking to people at a higher level — cabinet ministers — and institutions like UBC.” Not meeting mandated provincial targets for knee,
hip and cataract surgeries has cost IHA $3.4 million, and Vernon Mayor
Rob Sawatzky suggests that could have been avoided by opening more beds. “No matter what standard we use, we’re dramatically under serviced with beds,” said the retired doctor. It’s been previously suggested that a shortage of
nurses could be a challenge if there are more beds, but Sawatzky
doesn’t believe that is a concern. “All that takes is good management (of staff),” he said. Nancy Serwo, VJH acute area director, believes Wednesday’s tour was worthwhile. “It was a great opportunity to highlight the positive things happening here and all of the hard work,” she said. In terms of new beds possibly opening, Serwo says, “We are working closely with MLA Foster and the ministry.”
Local politicians continue to demand that overcrowding be addressed at Vernon Jubilee Hospital.
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1 comment:
If this Managerial incompetence was in the Private Sector, heads would roll.
But public sector Bureaucracy is self perpetuating and another lever of management will be introduced now.
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