Tri-County Vanguard

Latest Roseway ER closures ‘going well beyond anything that’s acceptable’

- KATHY JOHNSON THECOASTGU­ARD.CA

The latest round of ER closures at Roseway Hospital in Shelburne that had the emergency room closed a total of 104 hours between Aug. 1 and 7 is “going well beyond anything that’s acceptable,” said Shelburne Mayor Karen Mattatall.

“Over . . . seven days our ER will be closed 104 hours. Two of those closures will be 38 hours each. I don’t hardly even know what you can say about something like that,” said Mattatall in an interview. “It makes me say what are decision-makers thinking? We’re talking about people’s lives here. We’re not talking about a closed store. It’s over 100 km to access the nearest hospital.”

Mattatall noted although the town does have “wonderful paramedics” and a helipad, this “shouldn’t be your first recourse,” she said.

“We should have access right here locally, 24/7. I look at this NSHA (Nova Scotia Health Authority) and its a massive bloated administra­tive body and the province of Nova Scotia is continuing to support them, and they are not doing their job in my opinion,” she added. “People have the right to access health-care services locally and they are not making that happen.”

Citing the increasing costs for health care that Canadians pay for through taxes, she said, “that’s fine if you have access to the services. The residents of this county are paying taxes but have no access to services. Are we subsidizin­g others? I don’t know but it’s unacceptab­le we’re paying for a service that we don’t have.”

The reason cited for the emergency department closures – as is usually the case – is lack of physician availabili­ty. There were also emergency department closures in Digby announced for Aug. 2 and Aug. 7. Those added up to 28 hours and the reason cited was lack of physician availabili­ty.

Mattatall, along with a host of other municipal units in the region, as well as the Nova Scotia Health Coalition, have been working together since February as the Rural Nova Scotia Health Crisis Working Group to bring attention to the crisis in the health-care system and advocate for change.

“We talk about it in our working group like a disease. No family doctor, no ER coverage, no local access to services and no local decision making. All of these things are symptoms of the disease. We have to fix all of the problems,” she said. See LATEST, A2

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