Vancouver Sun

First of 10 urgent-care centres to open in Surrey

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B.C. Premier John Horgan has announced the opening of 10 urgent primary-care centres across the province over the next year, starting with the first in Surrey this fall.

Horgan says the facilities will be staffed with health-care providers, including doctors, registered nurses, nurse practition­ers and dietitians.

He says nearly 78,000 residents in Surrey lack a family doctor and they will be able to access care at the centre from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., seven days a week.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says the facility would divert patients from emergency rooms when they don’t need to be there.

He says people without a family doctor would be connected with general practition­ers and others at the facility, and sometimes referred to the centre from other health-care providers in the community.

Dix says one in six people in the province don’t have a family doctor and the team-based approach is a more appropriat­e model of care because people may not always need a physician for their health concerns.

He announced earlier this week that the province would provide funding for 50 new clinical pharmacist­s over the next three years. Some of them would be working with primary-care teams.

“We’re going to have four doctors, we’re going to have two nurse practition­ers here and seven registered nurses,” he told a news conference outside a building where the centre will be built.

The province said when it’s fully staffed, the facility could accommodat­e up to 1,300 patient visits per week.

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