Lethbridge Herald

Urgent care centre opens today

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British Columbia’s health minister has announced the opening of the province’s fifth urgent primary care centre in order to lessen demand on emergency department­s.

Adrian Dix said the facility opening in downtown Vancouver today will provide treatment on evenings and weekends for non-lifethreat­ening conditions.

The centres are part of the government’s plan to reform primary care through a “team-based” approach that includes a doctor and other healthcare providers including nurse practition­ers and pharmacist­s.

About 750,000 people in the province do not have a family doctor and often end up going to hospital emergency rooms, Dix said Sunday at the centre.

“There are currently 20,000 people in the city centre without a doctor,” he said, adding about a third of them go to emergency department­s at two nearby hospitals for conditions that could be treated at the centre.

“It’s our intention, our determinat­ion, to have one new urgent primary care centre in each health authority every six months for the next two years,” Dix said.

The province plans to open a total of 10 centres.

In the New Year, the Vancouver facility is expected to provide access to four family doctors in the same building.

“Additional­ly, basic lab services and Xrays will be provided onsite at the centre, and a pharmacy is also located in the building,” Dix said.

Patients with mild to moderate mental health and substance-use challenges will be provided “same-day access to community supports,” he said.

Dr. Eric Cadesky, president of Doctors of BC, said the best health-care systems in the world include access to strong primary health care.

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