By Kevin Gilby
DAVIDSON—The Heartland Health Region (HHR) and the Five Hills Health Region (FHHR) are to begin their expansion of the physician services in the Davidson/Craik corridor in early 2015.
The Ministry of Health encouraged the two regions to work together to provide a three-physician practice in the corridor. The need for a sustainable and reliable acute care/emergency service was identified in the region.
Margaret Baker, acting executive director for Primary Health Services Branch of the Ministry of Health, said, “the two regions have been talking for a couple years to provide a sustainable service in the two communities, both from emergency and every day perspectives.
“The plan involves three physicians working together, providing stabilized emergency services in Davidson. Craik would [have to] go to Davidson to get those services.”
According to Bert Linklater, senior VP of operations of FHHR, “we’ve for a long time not had a third position that could join the practice.” Previously, the physicians in Davidson and Craik have been attempting to co-ordinate their on-call schedules so that a physician is available 24/7.
Despite best efforts, Linklater says that there were “too many opportunities for there to be problems,” citing difficulty for EMS members to know which doctor was on-call and possible physician burn-out from working a two-in-three week on-call rotation. The College of Physicians recommends at most a one-in-three rotation.
Linklater indicated that it is a ministry directive to “reduce the number of times when hospitals go on bypass.” He explains that a hospital is in bypass when it is without an on-call physician and when in bypass, the hospital should discharge all acute care patients and ambulances services are not permitted to stop at the hospital. Patients in need of continued acute care would need to be transferred to a hospital with an on-call physician.
Referring to the Craik Health Centre, the Ministry of Health understands “that the Heartland Health Region will contract the physicians, and then Five Hills Health Region would hire the services to meet the needs for that community.”
“[The ministry] is supportive and recognizes that it provides continuity of care,” Baker said.
To read more, please see the Dec. 1 print edition of The Davidson Leader.