BSS
  11 Oct 2022, 10:33

Nursing shortage forces emergency room closures across Canada

OTTAWA, Oct 11, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - An acute nursing shortage is clogging or
even closing hospital emergency rooms across Canada, pushing an already
stressed national health system to the brink with potentially severe
consequences for patient care.

Burnout from the Covid-19 pandemic, abuse from patients and salary discontent
have seen nursing staff quitting their jobs in droves, and experts say the
situation is only likely to worsen.

The impact on emergency care is such that Ottawa police recently had to take
a shooting victim to hospital in their squad car, rather than wait for an
ambulance, and an elderly woman who fell and broke her hip was forced to wait
six hours for help from paramedics based 100 kilometers (62 miles) away.

Over the summer and into the fall, staffing shortages meant dozens of
emergency rooms were forced to close -- sometimes for a night or a weekend,
sometimes longer.

Wait times to see an ER doctor have soared to 12, 16, 20 hours -- or more.

"They're numb, deflated and feeling hopeless," said Cathryn Hoy, president of
the Ontario Nurses' Association. Herself a nurse for 20 years, she described
the situation as "critical."

Amelie Inard, 32, was taken to an ER in Montreal this week, in extreme pain
and peeing blood.

The place was packed, and an overwrought nurse told her to describe her
condition "in one sentence, really quickly, because of how busy they were,"
Inard said.

She eventually left in frustration, without seeing a doctor.

Hospital workloads are rising, Hoy said, along with patients' exasperation
over extended wait times, leading to a spiking of violence against nurses.

Several nurses told AFP they had been punched, scratched or spat on, and had
trays, dishes and feces thrown at them.

- 'Crazy conditions' -

In the capital Ottawa, ambulances were unavailable on more than 1,000
occasions from January to July, as paramedics were stuck waiting to unload
patients at crowded ERs.

A hospital in Peterborough, east of Toronto, in the past week was forced to
treat patients on gurneys in the parking lot because its ER was full, said
Hoy.

In Manitoba, doctor Merril Pauls said there had been "multiple times
throughout the summer when we had to shut down beds in the emergency room" at
Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre because of the nursing shortage.

On one recent Sunday, he said, "We had too many people coming in and had no
place to put them. We literally were double-bunking critical patients in a
resuscitation bay.

"Our nurses are really working in crazy conditions."

It's a "really significant phenomenon going on across the country," the
doctor added, and it's "getting worse."

- High turnover -

A recent survey by the Canadian Union of Public Employees, the country's
largest labor union, found that 87 percent of nurses have considered leaving
their job "because of the thankless and grueling working conditions."

"Even new graduates are quitting," Hoy said.

Federal health minister Jean-Yves Duclos has vowed to make it easier for
foreign credentials to be recognized. That could help 11,000 internationally
trained doctors and nurses get jobs in their field in Canada.

But that won't be nearly enough, with 34,400 nursing positions now vacant,
according to government data.

Compounding the problem, many Canadians -- like Inard -- don't have a family
doctor and turn to emergency rooms for care.

"It's just so difficult to find a family doctor," she said.

And a frequent shortage of regular hospital beds often means long waits to
transfer patients out of ERs to wards.


Ontario passed a bill at the end of September permitting transfers of
patients awaiting long-term care to facilities up to 150 kilometers away.

Provincial Health Minister Sylvia Jones said it would "ease pressures on
crowded emergency departments."

But critics say it could force frail, elderly people into care homes far from
their loved ones.

For now, almost everyone needing treatment is eventually seen. But delays can
pose long-term consequences for patients' health.

"If a stroke patient doesn't get access to a clot-busting medicine fast,
brain cells will die and the patient will end up being more disabled than
they would have been," Pauls said.

Serious infections can be deadly if not treated in time. So, too, can cancers
and other diseases, he added.

Pauls recalled routinely telling discharged patients "to come back if things
get worse."

"But now they laugh at us. They say: 'You're crazy. There's no way I'm going
to go through this again.'"