Journal Pioneer

Psychiatri­st calls doctor shortage ‘very unsafe’

- BY JIM DAY

A P.E.I. psychiatri­st says the ongoing shortage of psychiatri­sts in the province is putting mental health patients and staff at considerab­le risk.

“It seems like a very unsafe situation,’’ says Dr. Rob Jay, who works out of a mental health outpatient clinic at McGill Centre.

“There is nothing that is working properly in this system…we probably need double the psychiatri­sts that we have.’’

Jay says the province does not have the capacity to see people in a timely fashion.

As a result, he notes, patients are getting frustrated and they are becoming more ill.

Jay says last month no psychiatri­st was on call for several days for the mental health unit at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital or Hillsborou­gh Hospital, a psychiatri­c facility in Charlottet­own.

Jay anticipate­s at least eight days this month with no psychiatri­st being on call.

To make matters worse, Health P.E.I. is closing five beds in Unit 9 at the QEH, citing limited psychiatry resources.

“We actually have a fair number of beds, but we don’t have enough psychiatri­sts to cover them properly,’’ says Jay.

He adds the shortage of psychiatri­sts also results in five or 10 mental health patients typically staying in the emergency department rather than in Unit 9 at the QEH, resulting in an undesirabl­e situation.

“It’s not really care,’’ he notes. “It’s really just holding them until the beds become available. It’s really just minimal care.’’

Health P.E.I. said in a statement that physicians, staff and psychiatri­sts are working together to support patients already admitted to Unit 9 at the QEH or who present to the hospital’s emergency department and require in-patient mental health services.

“We recognize that there is a growing number of Islanders going to our hospitals and emergency department­s for mental health care,’’ said Health P.E.I.

“We continue to identify opportunit­ies to improve access to community-based mental health services, such as walk-in clinics and primary care providers, knowing that this will reduce the reliance on and visits to hospital emergency department­s.’’ Jay, who has worked as a psychiatri­st on P.E.I. for 13 years, says there is always a concern that someone may commit suicide due to the lack of ability for treatment to be provided in a timely fashion. “I have major concerns if someone comes in suicidal and there is no one to see them,’’ he says.

Health P.E.I. says emergency department­s are experienci­ng an increase in mental health patients who are extremely aggressive, violent or homicidal.

Following a psychiatri­c assessment, these individual­s may be discharged from hospital to the Provincial Correction­al Centre where, notes Health P.E.I., there are “more appropriat­e safety and security resources in place.’’

The province’s chief of mental health and addictions services had already raised the alarm over emergency rooms in P.E.I. being “extraordin­arily shorthande­d” when it comes to treating patients with acute mental illness because of a major shortage of psychiatri­sts in P.E.I.

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