Medicine Hat News

Brooks mayor says operating room vital to city’s obstetrics

Rumours have surfaced about the future of the facility, but AHS says they aren’t true

- GILLIAN SLADE gslade@medicineha­tnews.com Twitter: MHNGillian­Slade

The Mayor of Brooks says defunding the city’s maternity clinic is bad enough but fears that are circulatin­g of the operating room being sacrificed are causing even more stress.

Barry Morishita says nobody from Alberta Health Services has talked to the city about such plans, but an Ernst & Young report on AHS earlier this year said closing operating rooms in places where they are not being used at capacity and sending patients to other hospitals instead, would save money.

Losing the local operating room would be a devastatin­g blow to obstetric services in Brooks, which welcomes an average of 300 new babies each year.

If you don’t have an operating room where emergency Caesareans can be performed, physicians will not be willing to take on obstetric care because of the high liability risk, said Morishita.

“We are not asking for an increase in funding,” he said noting that the space in the Brooks health centre, where the maternity clinic has been operating, will be empty and not provide an income to AHS either .

“A box in a hospital (sitting) empty — It’s practicall­y dumb,” said Morishita.

AHS tells the News that there is no truth to the assumption that the operating room will be closed.

“We understand that there is speculatio­n happening within the community of Brooks and want to reassure you that AHS has not been having discussion­s about eliminatin­g surgeries or removing the operating room from the Brooks Health Centre,” said Linda Iwasiw, interim chief zone officer, AHS south zone.

Morishita says he is not sure of the exact number of surgeries that Brooks Health

Centre handles annually but there are ramificati­ons if it is no longer there.

He says the Ernst & Young review was an “accounting exercise” rather than looking at the bigger picture of providing cost-effective health care.

Morishita questions why the Ministry of Health can’t see that by following the review recommenda­tions may look like saving money but will simply create other issues and increased healthcare costs.

At the municipal level there could be significan­t savings if roads are no longer cleared of snow but there are long term ramificati­ons of leaving the roads in that shape, he explained.

It will become increasing­ly difficult to keep the doctors the community already has and even more difficult to recruit new ones.

“If you can’t recruit people to your community you can’t have an economic recovery,” said Morishita.

Prior to 2009 when the maternity clinic opened, there were mothers travelling to Medicine Hat for obstetric services — one even gave birth at the side of the road.

 ??  ?? Barry Morishita
Barry Morishita

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