Flemming must clarify fate of ERs, Liberals say
Horizon Health's CEO does not rule out closing some emergency rooms
CBC News
Posted: Feb 7, 2013 10:39 AM AT
Last Updated: Feb 7, 2013 12:21 PM AT
Related
Related Stories
Two Liberal MLAs are calling on Health Minister Ted Flemming to clearly outline his policy on the future of emergency rooms in New Brunswick.
The province’s health minister has indicated since he moved into the job that he was trying to find ways to deliver services in a less expensive way.
Flemming said recently the province could look at reducing the number of emergency rooms to 15 from 22.
Dieppe Centre-Lewisville Liberal MLA Roger Melanson said the Alward government has been in office for more than two years and it's time for the Progressive Conservatives to clarify their hospital plans.
"Honestly, it's not clear,” Melanson said.
John McGarry, the chief executive officer of the Horizon Health Network, said no decisions have been taken on whether to cut the number of ERs to 15 from 22. (CBC)Miramichi-Bay du Vin Liberal MLA Bill Fraser said he’s worried about what impact a reduction in emergency rooms could have on rural areas.
"We are a rural province. You know if you have a heart attack in a rural part of our province access to emergency care in a timely fashion is critical,” he said.
John McGarry, the newly-appointed chief executive officer of the Horizon Health Network, was asked about the possibility of reducing the number of emergency rooms during a legislative committee hearing on Wednesday.
McGarry said no decisions have been made on whether to shut down any emergency rooms.
He said the idea was prompted when he was having a theoretical discussion with the health minister.
"If there were nothing there and you came from Mars and said, ‘Everybody should be within one hour of an ER, where should I draw the circles?' You could draw 15 circles and cover everybody,” McGarry told the politicians.
He told reporters that while closing emergency rooms may not be popular in local communities, Horizon has to look at what is best for the province as a whole and ERs may be part of that.
"We do have to look at our basket of services, our clinical plan, in a provincial context and make some decisions,” McGarry said.
"The biggest spender in government is health care. We are not going to get it out of tourism. We are not going to get it out of fisheries. We are not going to get it out of [an] economic council. We are going to get it out of health, so … you have to be moving your dollars around.”
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Fredericton mom told to stop breastfeeding at public pool
- A Fredericton mother is speaking out after a lifeguard asked her to stop breastfeeding her daughter at the indoor public pool. more »
- MS liberation therapy fund should end, Parrott says
- Independent MLA and retired surgeon Jim Parrott is calling on the provincial government to stop spending taxpayers' money on a controversial treatment for multiple sclerosis. more »
- Dog taken amid allegations of abuse reunited with family
- A dog that went missing in Saint John earlier this week amidst online allegations of abuse and neglect has been reunited with its owners. more »
- Heavy rainfall forecast prompts flood warnings
- Environment Canada has issued a heavy rainfall warning for New Brunswick with as much as 120 millimetres of rain expected to fall in central, southeastern and southwestern regions by late Saturday. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Will Rob Ford's supporters leave Ford Nation?
- The growing controversy over a purported video alleging to show Toronto Mayor Rob Ford smoking crack cocaine may be testing the faith of even his most die-hard supporters. But experts say Ford's policies may trump whatever personal issues he's facing, and that his supporters may rally behind him. more »
- Royal Bank pledges not to outsource jobs for cash savings
- Royal Bank has promised it will never outsource a Canadian job to a foreign worker solely to save money. more »
- Neil Macdonald: How serious is Obama about curbing the drone surge?
- In a key speech this week, the U.S. president set out a host of supposed new safeguards for America's controversial practice of remote-controlled rough justice. But as Neil Macdonald writes, the underlying rationale for drone use has not fundamentally changed. more »
- Making The Mandela Tapes
- Producer Robin Benger describes how he obtained broadcast access to interviews Nelson Mandela recorded in the 1990s. A CBC Radio Ideas program on the Mandela tapes airs May 28. more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford denies using crack cocaine
- The mayor of Canada's largest city told a packed news conference that he doesn't use crack cocaine and isn't a crack addict. more »
- Fredericton mom told to stop breastfeeding at public pool
- Dog taken amid allegations of abuse reunited with family
- Heavy rainfall forecast prompts flood warnings
- Joe Oliver challenges Trudeau's west-east pipeline 'tone'
- Saint John carpenters lowest paid in country
- Rothesay man charged with 2nd-degree murder
- MS liberation therapy fund should end, Parrott says
- Teen dies after falling from moving vehicle
- Moncton defends spending on soccer fields

