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Results of healthcare funding will “take time”: Minister Toews

Finance Minister Travis Toews says the money the Alberta government has committed to healthcare, in the long run, will help elevate some of the strain that emergency rooms are facing.

Toews adds wait times and personnel shortages are being faced across the province, and is part of why the government has committed over $3 billion to healthcare in the spring budget to help decrease emergency room wait times and cut wait times for surgeries.

“I’m not going to pretend we are going to see a difference tomorrow; we aren’t. It is going to take time,” Toews says. “But I know right now Minister [Jason] Copping and the team at health are starting to make some progress province-wide.”

Toews says average wait times at hospitals have already started to decrease across the province, with patients on average having to wait more than seven hours to see a doctor back in November. The average wait time across the province is now six and a half hours. He acknowledges these times are still too long but are trending in the right direction.

“The big challenge is that there is a shortage of frontline healthcare professionals in some regions of the province, at some times.”

This is an issue Alberta Health Services has acknowledged. There have been three reported closures at the Elk Point ED dating back to last August. The latest was reported in January.

Toews says one of the solutions to this issue is training more nurses and doctors, along with bringing more foreign nurses and doctors to the province.

Written by: Kassandra Patterson – MyGrandePrairieNow
Gerry Lampow
Gerry Lampow
Gerry has lived in Lloydminster since winter 2010. That detail is important as coming from the Caribbean he did not see green grass until May. Now an Alberta/Western Canada resident, you would be hard-pressed to find a stronger proponent of Lloydminster than the news guy that appreciates a healthy dose of rock music and dress code leather. His mantra is focus on one thing and do it well.
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