
B.C. health minister calls pediatric ward closure at Kelowna hospital challenging
A ongoing pediatrician shortage in Kelowna, B.C., has prompted Interior Health (IH) to make a decision to temporarily shut down the entire pediatric ward at Kelowna General Hospital (KGH).
'Very scary,' said Kaitlyn Polmear, a Kelowna mother of two.
The specialist shortage has left the hospital without coverage on numerous occasions in recent months but it is now resulting in the 10-bed unit closure for at least six weeks.
'We're hoping six weeks will be it but there is a possibility it will extend beyond the six weeks,' said Dr. Hussam Azzam, IH's executive medical director of community and maternity.
'That's very concerning,' said Helen Chong, another mother of two small children.
2:19
Limited pediatric service in Kelowna ER
According to IH, it has funding for 12 hospital pediatricians but is only operating with half of that as it struggles to recruit the specialists.
Story continues below advertisement
'We do appreciate that this is a concerning decision and that the public may be worried but we had no other option but to protect the other pediatrician physicians that we have at the moment,' Azzam said.
Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
With the existing pediatricians stretched to the limit, Azzam said the decision was also necessary to preserve coverage for critical services including the neonatal intensive care unit and high-risk deliveries.
Azzam reminded parents and guardians to continue relying on the emergency room when needed.
The ward closure means that a child needing to be admitted to hospital will have to be transferred to another hospital either within the IH region or beyond.
'I just want to make sure everybody is re-assured that your child will receive the care they need,' Azzam said. 'Decisions will be made on a case by case basis.'
5:54
Need for diversifying Canadian healthcare
B.C. health minister Josie Osborne acknowledged the situation at KGH as challenging but said the province is taking a number of actions to resolve the problem in Kelowna and across B.C.
Story continues below advertisement
'Opening a brand new medical school in Surrey, opening in September 2026 to its first intake of students, expanding the UBC medical school, adding residency seats, working to streamline the credentialing process for people coming from other provinces, from other countries,,' Osborne said.
Osborne also added that IH is also doing its part to address the shortage.
'Interior Health is working hard to address this, putting in place incentives for locums and for physicians, looking at additional changes to current compensation models, for example, and doing everything they can to attract new pediatricians to the site,' Osborne said.
Azzam said one additional pediatrician is expected to start working in July.
The pediatric ward will close on May 26.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Toronto Star
6 hours ago
- Toronto Star
Teva birth control pills recalled across Canada over extra placebos
Birth control medication is being pulled from Canadian shelves over extra placebo tablets, Health Canada says. The recall concerns Teva Canada's Seasonale tablet with lot numbers 100059661 and 100069150, according to the agency's recall notice. Health Canada is urging patients not to skip doses or stop taking their birth control. But if your package contains white placebo pills in the first or second blister card tray, don't take them, and return the pills to your pharmacy for a replacement. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW If you can't get to a pharmacy right away, take the next pink active pill in the proper order, as laid out in the instructions, until you can get a replacement. If you took a white placebo pill instead of an active pink pill from one of the first two trays, or if you are unsure, you should also use another method of non-hormonal contraception and consult with your health care professional.


Toronto Star
7 hours ago
- Toronto Star
3 Canadian national team players among the Whitecaps stricken by illness
Three Canadian national team players were among those who fell ill following the Vancouver Whitecaps' appearance in the CONCACAF Champions Cup final last weekend in Mexico City. The Whitecaps said a 'significant number' of players and staff had a gastrointestinal illness. Three of them — Ali Ahmed, Sam Adekugbe and Jayden Nelson — were ill when they arrived at Canada's training camp in Halifax ahead of Saturday's Canadian Shield match against Ukraine, coach Jesse Marsch said Friday.


Global News
11 hours ago
- Global News
B.C. targets 3 U.S. states with advertising blitz to recruit doctors, nurses
The British Columbia government has begun an advertising blitz in three U.S. states in an effort to recruit American doctors and nurses to the province. The six-week campaign involves print, video, digital, social media and audio elements and began in Washington, Oregon and parts of California on Monday. The province is targeting billboards, transit shelters, ride-share screens and businesses within a 16-kilometre radius of a health care facility, and medical trade publications. Together, it hopes to reach 80 per cent of heatlh-care workers in its target areas. 1:50 B.C. hopes to attract U.S. doctors ͞'Our message to U.S. doctors, nurses and allied health workers is strong and clear: there has never been a better time to come to British Columbia, and for Canadian health professionals currently living and working in the U.S., now is the time to come home,' Health Minister Josie Osborne said. Story continues below advertisement 'With the chaos and uncertainty happening in the U.S., we are seizing the opportunity to attract the talent we need to join and strengthen our public, universal health care system in British Columbia.' Get weekly health news Receive the latest medical news and health information delivered to you every Sunday. Sign up for weekly health newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy The move comes as the province works with the regulatory colleges for doctors and nurses to streamline U.S. credential recognition. 3:03 B.C. hires 113 U.S. trained nurses In April, the B.C. College of Nurses and Midwives made changes that will allow a U.S. nurse to register in a few days rather than a few months. The provincial College of Physicians and Surgeons is currently working on bylaw changes that would allow doctors to practice in B.C. without needing to take further licensing exams. The Ministry says since announcing that plan in March, 704 doctors and 525 nurses have reached out with interest in moving to B.C. Story continues below advertisement The province said last month it had already hired 113 U.S. nurses. The ministry said Friday the work also includes 'tailored support and guidance' for U.S. healthcare workers trying to navigate the application and immigration process.