The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Plea made for Tyne Valley doctor

- BY ERIC MCCARTHY

Ellerslie resident Doreen Wooder has let Health and Wellness Minister Robert Mitchell know she is not satisfied with the state of health care in the Tyne Valley region.

Wooder spoke out during the annual meeting of the Stewart Memorial Hospital Foundation in Northam where Mitchell was guest speaker. The former Stewart Memorial Hospital now functions as a manor while awaiting decommissi­oning once a new manor opens this fall.

“It’s us, here, who had a hospital closed, that felt very bitter about it, who were told, ‘this is all going to be fixed by the clinic’, ” Wooder said.

“Guess what? (The clinic’s) still not working to its potential. It needs a change of hours; it needs a staff. (And) it needs to be a staff that stays there, not one that just comes for a few weeks and leaves,” she continued.

As Mitchell started to explain that staff is working diligently on recruitmen­t and retention, Wooder interjecte­d, “They’ve been doing that for two years.”

The minister acknowledg­ed that and pointed out all other jurisdicti­ons are working on recruitmen­t and retention. He also acknowledg­ed a reliance on locums but pointed out, “If we can get locums to come in to help out, we will never turn them down.”

Mitchell said he is reaching out to physicians and asking them to take on larger panel sizes as a means of reducing the number of people on the patient registry. In addition, staff is working with medical students from the province, providing them with incentives and encouragem­ent in hopes they will come back home to practice.

“It’s not unique to here,” Mitchell said, “but it is obviously more concerning to you, what’s going on here, and I can appreciate that.”

He suggested the Tyne Valley clinic is one of the best on the Island.

“If I’m a doctor walking in there, my hand is up: ‘This is a beautiful facility; I’ll come here’,” he said.

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