logo
ER closures forced by shortage of doctors, nurses raise fears in rural Sask.

ER closures forced by shortage of doctors, nurses raise fears in rural Sask.

Yahoo3 days ago
Residents in some rural Saskatchewan communities say closures forced by a shortage of doctors and nurses have left them without access to emergency room services, forcing residents to travel long distances in critical moments.
"The closures are just … coming one after the other," said Angela Silzer, who runs Interlake Human Resources Corporation, a non-profit organization and group home for adults with intellectual disabilities in Watrous, southeast of Saskatoon.
Silzer's facility is across the street from the local hospital, which has had to close its ER dozens of times since the start of the year.
"We're really concerned if we need emergency services," Silzer said. Some of her patients have serious health issues that could require immediate attention.
In that case, Silzer would have to take them to the hospital in Humboldt, a roughly 80-kilometre drive.
She's worried about the effect that would have on her clients with intellectual disabilities, who may be confused about what's happening.
"We're already in a distressful situation, and then we have to go an hour away and wait for care with people we don't know," she said.
The Town of Watrous has been communicating the ER closures over a community Facebook page and posting signs on the hospital's doors.
But "in an emergency, you're not going to take time to look at social media to find out if you have an emergency department," Silzer said.
Many people in the community have started to assume the hospital is always closed, she said.
"You might as well assume you have to go to the city, which is at least an hour drive to Saskatoon … or Humboldt."
The wait goes beyond the emergency room. Silzer said she has even started to put off medical appointments for her knee issues due to staffing shortages at the hospital.
"I'd go to anybody, but there is literally nobody to go to," she said. With so many people facing barriers when looking for health care, many have started to feel "there is no point in even trying," she said.
Silzer calls it a "vicious cycle" that will put more strain on the health-care system.
"You can't go in [to the hospital] when you should go in because you can't get an appointment," she said. "So you let things get worse. That could be with anything. It could be small things like my knee. It could be big things like cancer."
Watrous Mayor John Gunderson says there is always concern in the community when health-care services are not available, even on a temporary basis.
"In recent weeks, we have been in contact with various levels of the SHA [Saskatchewan Health Authority] and are satisfied they are doing everything to help resolve the situation," Gunderson wrote in an email to CBC Tuesday.
Currently, the town is short of doctors to cover the Watrous District Health Complex, Gunderson wrote.
During the summer months, it can be difficult to find locum coverage, said Gunderson, but he is "hopeful this can be restored soon."
"We continue to follow up with SHA and have another scheduled meeting later this week," he said.
In Kipling, east of Regina, the ER closed on July 4. It's expected to remain closed until July 14, according to Mayor Patricia Jackson.
"We have been informed that a couple of staff members have resigned," she said, adding that those in need of lab work or X-rays can be accommodated.
"But people will not be able to come in for ER because they cannot guarantee they can have staff," Jackson said.
Until the hospital sorts its staffing shortages, Kipling residents have been asked to go to hospitals in Broadview, about a 35-kilometre drive, or Moosomin, about 75 kilometres away. Those in need of specialists must travel to Regina until Kipling's hospital reopens July 14.
"They fully anticipate that it will be reopened by then," Jackson said.
Kipling has been grappling with a physician shortage since the beginning of 2024, according to Jackson. At that time, two of three doctors left the town of nearly 1,100 people.
Jackson said during that time they were "very fortunate" to be able to have coverage from locums and nearby communities.
Many doctors have experienced a type of culture shock when moving to a small town like Kipling, said Jackson. Going forward, she wants doctors who are considering the move to know they are not only needed, but also supported.
"It does take supports for them too, if they've never been in Saskatchewan before," said Jackson.
The recent emergency room closures have pushed the province's Official Opposition to sound the alarm.
The NDP said 12 hospitals have had their emergency rooms closed or "other disruptions to service" over the last month.
"We hear of people arriving at facilities desperately seeking health care, only to find a sign on the door saying it's closed," Saskatchewan NDP associate health critic Keith Jorgenson said on Monday.
He said many of the towns have also been using Facebook pages to communicate hospital closures, but that's been inconsistent.
It's a concern "when these emergency rooms are closed, which could be the difference between life and death, and [are] closing without warning and without notice," Jorgenson said. "This simply should not be happening."
Despite the closures, Jorgenson said the Saskatchewan Party government has not made a path forward clear.
"Where is the accountability? Where is the plan to get us out of this mess? The truth is, there isn't a plan," he said. "We've seen that this government doesn't even seem to care."
CBC requested comment from both the Saskatchewan Health Authority and the provincial government on Tuesday. Neither provided comment prior to publication.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Talk to medical professionals, not just ChatGPT, urge Ontario doctors
Talk to medical professionals, not just ChatGPT, urge Ontario doctors

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Talk to medical professionals, not just ChatGPT, urge Ontario doctors

ChatGPT and similar artificial intelligence tools can sometimes answer patient questions accurately, but Canadian medical researchers caution that the information needs to be carefully checked before acting on what you see. The researchers' advice comes as the Ontario Medical Association (OMA) hosted a media briefing this week, discussing DIY information sources — from search engines to social media to chatbots — and their impacts, as well as what patients can do instead. It's important to warn people now, said Dr. Valerie Primeau, a psychiatrist from North Bay who leads inpatient and community programs for mental health and addictions, because patients are increasingly turning to AI tools. The chatbots give convincing and empathetic results — but the information might be fake. "I have patients now that talk to ChatGPT to get advice and have a conversation," Primeau said. "So I foresee that we will continue having this issue, and if we don't address it now and help people navigate this, they will struggle." Dr. David D'Souza, a radiation oncologist in London, Ont., who leads clinical research into image-based treatments for cancer, said depending on how patients interrupt what AI tells them, they could put off conventional treatments. "A patient came to me asking if he should wait to have his cancer that was diagnosed treated in a few years because he believes that AI will customize cancer treatments for patients," D'Souza told reporters. "I had to convince him why he should have treatment now." Given that consumers will use the tools, OMA president Dr. Zainab Abdurrahman advised if a post says "doctors have been hiding this from you," she suggests checking the websites of relevant specialist groups, such as provincial cancer care associations, to see if they back it up. Fake ads, including AI-generated images, can also lead patients astray, warned Abdurrahman, who is also a clinical immunologist and allergist. While the technology is progressing, today's chatbots routinely answer health queries with false information that appears authoritative. In one study, Dr. Benjamin Chin-Yee, an assistant professor in the pathology and lab medicine department at Western University and his co-authors fed nearly 5,000 summaries of medical and scientific literature into AI large language models including ChatGPT and asked for summaries. They found three-quarters of the AI versions missed key parts of carefully guarded statements. For example, the journal article might say a drug was only effective in a certain group of patients while the summary leaves out that key detail, said Chin-Yee, who is also a hematologist. "The worry is that when that nuance in detail is lost, it can be misleading to practitioners who are trying to use that knowledge to impact their clinical practice." Chin-Yee said AI is an active area of research that is rapidly changing, with newer models that are more human-like and user-friendly, but there can be drawbacks to relying on the tools alone. Similarly, David Chen, a medical student at the University of Toronto, compared results provided by chatbots to 200 questions about cancer from a Reddit forum to responses provided by oncologists. "We were surprised to find that these chatbots were able to perform to near-human expert levels of competency based on our physician team's assessment of quality, empathy and readability," Chen said. But the experimental results may not reflect what happens in the real world. "Without medical oversight, it's hard to 100 per cent trust some of these outputs of these generative technologies," Chen said, adding concerns about privacy, security, and patient trust still haven't been fully explored. WATCH | Researchers use AI to help treat brain patients: Don't rely on a single chatbot Generative AI technologies like chatbots are based on pattern-matching technologies that give the most likely output to a given question, based on whatever information it was trained on. In medicine, though, unlikely possible diagnoses can also be important and shouldn't be ruled out. Plus, chatbots can hallucinate — produce outputs that sound convincing but are incorrect, made up, nonsensical or irrelevant. "There's also been research studies that have been put out that suggested that there are hallucination rates of these chat bots that can be upwards of 20 per cent," Chen said, which could make the output "clinically erroneous." In the spring, cardiologist Eric Topol, a professor and executive vice president of Scripps Research in San Diego, Calif., published a book, Superagers: An Evidence-Based Approach to Longevity, that looked at the impact of AI on longevity and quality of life. "There's a lot of good anecdotes, there's bad anecdotes," Topol said of patients using chatbots. "It hasn't been systematically assessed in a meaningful way for public use." Topol said he advises people to consult multiple chatbots and to check that you're getting reliable information. He also suggested asking for citations from the medical literature, noting sometimes those aren't real and need to be verified. Ideally, Topol said there would be a real-world test of chatbot responses from tens of thousands of people tracking what tests were done, what diagnosis was given and the outcomes for those who used AI sources and those who didn't. But tech companies are unlikely to participate because each one wouldn't gain, he said. "It's a different world now and you can't go back in time," Topol said of using the tools wisely.

How I told my family and friends about my cancer
How I told my family and friends about my cancer

Washington Post

time2 hours ago

  • Washington Post

How I told my family and friends about my cancer

You've just found out you have a life-threatening disease. Whom do you tell? And what the heck do you tell them? Figuring this out has been both perplexing and illuminating. In this installment of what I call my 'living with dying' series, I'm going to share how I told my friends about my terminal diagnosis. As with all of these pieces, one size does not fit all. But I hope others might snag something useful from it.

We Asked 3 Cardiologists the #1 Change to Make for Lower Cholesterol—They All Said the Same Thing
We Asked 3 Cardiologists the #1 Change to Make for Lower Cholesterol—They All Said the Same Thing

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

We Asked 3 Cardiologists the #1 Change to Make for Lower Cholesterol—They All Said the Same Thing

Reviewed by Dietitian Maria Laura Haddad-GarciaCutting back on saturated fat is one of the best ways to help lower cholesterol levels. Increasing your intake of heart-healthy fats like olive oil and nuts can improve your heart health. Plant-based foods and fiber-rich meals can help support naturally lower cholesterol your healthcare provider says you need to get your cholesterol down to a healthy range, it's natural to feel unsure about where to start. The good news? Even small diet and lifestyle habits can have a big impact. We asked cardiologists what the most effective first step is, and they all said the same thing: Cutting back on saturated fat. Here's why it matters—and how to make it work in your everyday life. Cholesterol is a waxy, fat-like substance that the liver produces. This compound is not only found in cells all throughout the body, but also in some of the foods you eat. Some cholesterol is good for you and supports healthy functioning, such as with vitamin and hormone production, says Matthew Vorsanger, M.D. But when there's too much cholesterol in the blood, it can lead to health problems. There are two main types: high-density lipoprotein (HDL), often called 'good' cholesterol, and low-density lipoprotein (LDL), known as 'bad' cholesterol. 'Elevated LDL increases the risk of cholesterol build-up in the arteries that can lead to serious health conditions, such as heart attack and stroke,' Vorsanger says. So, how does saturated fat fit into the mix? It turns out that saturated fats—which are found in fatty cuts of meat, full-fat dairy products and many processed foods—can raise your LDL cholesterol levels. Of course, genetics and other factors can also play a role. However, across several studies, researchers have found that diets low in saturated fats and high in unsaturated fats are associated with lower cholesterol levels and a reduced risk of heart disease. 'Reducing saturated fat intake is the best change people can make to lower their cholesterol,' says Sarah Speck, M.D., M.P.H. Saturated fat changes the way the liver metabolizes cholesterol. So, cutting back on saturated fat helps reduce LDL-cholesterol, largely by improving the liver's ability to remove LDL from the bloodstream. Fat isn't an enemy. Your body needs fat for proper growth and development, including hormone production and the absorption of fat-soluble vitamins. However, 'The body needs fat as an essential nutrient, but the type of fat can determine our health,' says Barbara Hutchinson, M.D. Attempting to eliminate all saturated fats from your diet is unlikely to lead to a sustainable change. And in fact, there's no need to. Vorsanger recommends sticking to the official guidelines. The Dietary Guidelines for Americans suggest keeping saturated fat to less than 10% of your daily calories, while the American Heart Association recommends aiming for less than 6%. Increasing your intake of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats is another effective way to lower LDL cholesterol levels. Foods rich in these types of fat include nuts, seeds, olive oil, fatty fish and avocado. Specks notes that the protein content in leaner animal proteins is just as beneficial, but these animal sources of protein have less saturated fat. Think poultry and fish. When choosing beef or pork, go for leaner cuts and limit portion size. When it comes to dairy, opt for low-fat or nonfat options. 'This can help not only to reduce saturated fat intake, but also to increase fiber intake,' Vorsanger says. 'Soluble fiber found in vegetables, fruits, whole grains, beans, lentils and seeds [such as] chia and ground flax seeds can help to lower LDL and total cholesterol levels,' Vorsanger says. This type of fiber binds with cholesterol and bile acids, reducing how much they are absorbed into your bloodstream. Plus, plant-based foods like whole grains, nuts and legumes contain small amounts of naturally occurring compounds called plant sterols that can help lower LDL cholesterol, Hutchinson says. Cardiologists agree that a heart-healthy lifestyle goes beyond what's on your plate. These changes can also help lower cholesterol and protect your heart: Get Moving:. Aim for 150 minutes of moderate-intensity activity each week. Walking, jogging, swimming and dancing are all good options, but find something that feels good to you. Prioritize Sleep: 'This is important since chronic sleep deprivation also leads to biochemical turmoil, which affects hormones and choices that will alter our cholesterol levels,' Speck says. Manage Stress: While not all stress is within your control, excessive levels of stress can be hazardous to your health. 'Taking a proactive approach to managing stress will lower cholesterol levels by reducing the detrimental effects of stress hormones on our metabolism,' Speck says. Some things that can help include journaling, stretching, deep breathing or simply spending time in nature. If you're working on lowering your cholesterol, cardiologists agree that cutting back on saturated fat is one of the most impactful changes you can make. You don't have to steer away from it completely. Instead, try opting for leaner animal protein or plant-based options more often than not. Plus, research has also shown that lifestyle habits like being physically active, getting enough sleep and managing stress are also key to keeping your cholesterol levels in check. As always, speak with your healthcare provider before making major dietary or lifestyle changes, especially if you have existing health conditions or take medications. And remember: it's not about perfection. Every step—no matter how small—gets you closer to a healthier heart. Read the original article on EATINGWELL

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store