Journal Pioneer

Private to public

Government says arrangemen­t is temporary while it addresses hospital shortages

- BY ERIC MCCARTHY wbureau@journalpio­neer.com

Physiother­apists from West Prince are helping fill the void at hospitals in Alberton and O’Leary for patients who require in-house physiother­apy services. Currently Health P.E.I. is looking to fill the positions, but as it became more difficult the government issued an RFP for private businesses to offer services.

A private physiother­apy service provider is helping to fill a void for physiother­apy vacancies at two West Prince hospitals.

You Move Physio in Alberton entered into a one-year contract with Health P.E.I. in December to provide physiother­apy services to in-patients at Western Hospital in Alberton and Community Hospital in O’Leary, until vacancies are filled. Amanda Hamel, a communicat­ions officer with Health P.E.I., said Health P.E.I. was having difficulty filling the vacancies at the two hospitals to the point that it issued a Request for Proposals from private providers willing to help out in the interim.

You Move Physio responded to the RFP and was awarded the contract, providing 16 to 20 hours of in-patient care per week.

Geoffrey Irving, who owns You Move Physio with his wife and physiother­apist Amy Irving, can identify with the challenges Health P.E.I. is having filling the vacancies.

He said the business had been looking for a second physiother­apist for about a year and a half before filling the position last September. It is only in having a second physiother­apist on staff that they were able to respond to the RFP, he acknowledg­es.

“For us, it was to bridge the gap,” said Hamel, pointing to

the need to provide patients with physiother­apy services in a timely fashion. She indicated Health P.E.I. is continuing its recruitmen­t efforts and said the union representi­ng hospital physiother­apists are supportive of the provincial government applying to the private sector for assistance.

Paul Beauregard, business rep for the Internatio­nal Union

of Operating Engineers Local 942 which represents in-hospital physiother­apists, clarifies that the union gave its okay to look to the private sector as a temporary fix, but he says it’s disappoint­ing the situation has come to this. “It is a situation where they have absolutely no one to fill the positions currently,” he acknowledg­ed.

“We don’t like to see health

services being privatized,” he noted, but agreed it is critical that patients who require physiother­apy receive the service as soon as possible. . “We have been trying to address this issue for several years now, and it is falling on deaf ears.”

Beauregard said government has to get more competitiv­e. “The problem now, a lot of people are finding the private sector a lot more attractive.” He said that’s a combinatio­n of wages, benefits and the scheduling of working hours. Hamel said government is considerin­g how best to respond to the shortage including possibly offering to sponsor physiother­apist students. Beauregard agrees that has been an effective strategy within other discipline­s in the health care sector. He said government has to look at a variety of strategies to help attract physiother­apists, especially to rural areas.

Irving said his wife had worked in physiother­apy at Community Hospital for five years and also did relief work at Western prior to opening a clinic.

Providing clinic and inhospital coverage, he said, is a matter of scheduling but admits it’s been busy. “Just with the girls working extra hours, we haven’t had to sacrifice any clinic hours.”

Much of the in-hospital work Amy Irving and Kathleen O’Meara provide, he said, is scheduled to coincide with nurses and occupation­al therapists working in the hospitals.

Even if the hospital positions are filled before the contract is up, Irving anticipate­s You Move Physio’s services will still be required while the new recruits transition in. He said there are provisions to extend the contract if vacancies persist.

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 ?? ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Amy Irving, left, and Kathleen O’Meara, physiother­apists at You Move Physio assess a client at the company’s Alberton clinic. The clinic has also entered into a contract to provide in-hospital services at Western and Community hospitals for a year...
ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER Amy Irving, left, and Kathleen O’Meara, physiother­apists at You Move Physio assess a client at the company’s Alberton clinic. The clinic has also entered into a contract to provide in-hospital services at Western and Community hospitals for a year...

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