“Heather Stefanson and the PCs cut hospital beds, fired 300 nurses, and closed three emergency rooms in Winnipeg,” said Uzoma Asagwara, NDP Health critic at a press conference at the Manitoba Legislature. “Because of her cuts, our hospitals are overflowing and if Heather Stefanson is re-elected, we know she will cut healthcare again. The people who broke our healthcare system can’t be trusted to fix it.” However, a spokesperson for Shared Health – which provided the information quoted – said the NDP are
misinterpreting the numbers.
The ongoing healthcare system challenges in Manitoba have come to light with a provincial election looming. The current PC government is being
challenged by the provincial NDP party with staggering statistics that show just how
critical the bed occupancy rates are, on top of the issues of staffing and the number of emergency departments in the province. The
PC party was noted to have shut down emergency rooms, cut hospital beds, and fired 300 nurses – which the NDPs expressed will
continue to happen if the PC government is re-elected.
The Health Sciences Centre (HSC) Winnipeg has reached critical
bed occupancy rates at 107.7 percent in critical care and 103.8 percent in medicine wards in Spring 2023. It’s
recommended by medical experts to have occupancy rates of 85 percent. These statistics are only based on the number of licensed beds, which is “lower than the actual number of beds that are staffed and open”. The critical care beds, for example, total 104 across the province and have had
midnight census patients ranging from the high 70s to mid-90s from December 2022 to May 2023.
To combat the worsening healthcare crisis in Manitoba, the NDP has pledged to invest
$500 million in recruitment and retention – on top of
building three new emergency departments in Manitoba and a new emergency room in Eriksdale. This counters the PC government
downgrading emergency departments at the Victoria Seven Oaks and Concordia hospitals in 2017. The NDP investment should also add
300 nurses back into the system, in addition to
400 physicians and other healthcare workers.
The PC party says that the NDP
voted against their $400 million plan to train and recruit 2,000 healthcare professionals – but staffing is only one issue that’s accelerating the healthcare crisis. The
need for beds is critical to alleviating the stress from the medicine and critical care wards in the emergency departments. On top of that, additional emergency rooms would provide more
intensive care units.
Healthcare is being strained across the country, with
labour shortages being a pinch point. Bed shortages and occupancy levels are also major stressors. In Ontario, half of the
intensive care units were at capacity or had one or two beds available in 2021. Similar to Manitoba, the Ontario PC government
cut funding and 1,100 beds in 2017. Based on
comparisons with other developed countries,
Canada ranks 25th when it comes to acute care bed availability but ranks 2nd in healthcare spending as a percent of GDP.
Sources