
Minister says Alberta emergency room deaths and poor outcomes are exceptions to the norm
CBC
As Alberta doctors raise red flags about seeing what they say are delays in emergency room care, the province’s hospitals minister says he doesn’t think cases that the doctors have recently highlighted reflect the health system broadly.
Last week, emergency room doctors sent a list to provincial government and health officials of what they say were six potentially preventable deaths and at least 27 other cases where they allege emergency room delays contributed to the patient’s demise or worsened their condition. Locations and identifying information were removed from the document for patient privacy.
The ER doctor who sent the list to government and health leaders said it was a cry for help and that he believes the cases it mentions are just "the tip of the iceberg."
At a news conference in Calgary on Tuesday, Hospital and Surgical Health Services Minister Matt Jones said he sees it differently.
“I don't feel that these anonymized cases are representative of the incredible care that our system and our front-line health-care professionals provide on a day-to-day basis,” he told reporters.
“I do take them seriously. We must learn from them. But, we also do incredible work every day, for Albertans and their families.”
Jones said sick and frail people arrive in hospitals every day. He said about 0.07 per cent of the two million people who go to Alberta emergency rooms die each year.
He also said Alberta is doing well compared to other provinces at training and recruiting health-care workers.
“You can build all the buildings in the world,” Jones said. “They don't mean anything if you don't have health-care professionals to staff them.”
Although Tuesday's news conference was to promote an expansion of hospital and health-care facilities in the province, Jones said to cope with patients waiting too long for care, various health organizations are also trying to divert less sick patients to clinics, looking at “hospital efficiency” to see how they can move patients more quickly, and trying to transfer patients ready for long-term or home care.
Jones said the provincial government is “actively exploring” how hospitals can discharge patients on weekends, evenings and holidays to continuing care centres. Doctors have pointed to limited office-hours transfers to other facilities as a bottleneck.
Dr. Warren Thirsk, an emergency medicine physician at Edmonton’s Royal Alexandra Hospital and the president of the Alberta Medical Association’s section of emergency medicine, called on members of the public to share their stories of suffering at crowded hospitals.
Doctors, he said, are trapped behind patient privacy constraints, and human stories have more power to instigate change than data or general observations.
Thirsk helped co-ordinate the collection of doctors’ stories that his colleague, Dr. Paul Parks, sent to the provincial government. CBC News obtained leaked copies of the document, but not from Parks or Thirsk.













