Home
Current Issue
Archives
Links
About Us
Ad Rates
The Columbia Journal
P.O. Box 2633 MPO,
Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada V6B 3W8
Phone: 604-266-6552
Fax: 604-267-3342
Web: www.columbiajournal.ca

|

|
Nurses
Proposed Patient’s Bill of Rights
CPP News Service
BC nurses are proposing specific and far-reaching improvements in the
services and quality of care available to patients under our
publicly-funded health care system.
The nurses have issued a Patient’s Bill of Rights which proposes
significant improvements in what patients can expect when they go to an
emergency room, require surgery, seek community health services such as
home care, need a bed in a nursing home, require palliative care in the
last days of their lives and want access to information about their
care.
With British Columbians struggling to cope with hospital overcrowding,
bed closures and the elimination of long term care nursing homes,
nurses’ reps claim this proposed Patient’s Bill of Rights
presents an opportunity for the provincial government to engage in a
dialogue with the general public and with health care providers about
the resources that are needed to ensure patients get the care they need
in BC.
“As care-givers who are directly involved in working with patients in
hospitals, in the community and in long term care we have an obligation
to speak out and say what British Columbians should be receiving from
our health care system,” says Debra McPherson president of the BC
Nurses’ Union. “Unfortunately, because of the provincial government’s
fiscal policies, the government has forced its health authorities to
cut back on health care services throughout the province, creating a
very difficult situation for patients.”
This proposed bill is also being backed by BC’s Registered Nurses and
Registered Psychiatric Nurses.
“The Patient’s Bill of Rights establishes what we believe the health
care system should be providing if the government was supporting it
properly,” she said. “Among other things that means ensuring there is
an adequate supply of Registered Nurses and Registered Psychiatric
Nurses to provide safe, quality care by improving working conditions
and addressing nurses’ workloads.”
This Bill of Rights includes providing freedom of movement and choice
for residents of urban and rural communities to access an emergency
department within a maximum of one half hour travel time; the right to
be assessed (triaged) immediately; treated immediately if needing
resuscitation; within15 minutes for emergent cases and within 30
minutes for urgent cases; and the right to be discharged, transferred
to another hospital or admitted to a hospital bed within 6 hours, as
well as subsidized travel for patients who can’t get the treatment they
need in their own communities.
It also calls for maximum wait times for diagnostic, therapeutic,
surgical and rehabilitative treatment, established through a public
process that includes input from the public and health care providers,
as well as greater emphasis on good health maintenance and prevention
measures through health education in public schools.
Most importantly, it calls for guarantees that patients will have a
direct say in the planning and administration of their treatments,
including direct access to information on their treatments and on the
performance of the health care system.
But the government says there may be no need for such a bill, claiming
that its new budget provides for patient services and guarantees the
right of access to health services within a reasonable time.
Finance Minister Gary Collins, in his budget speech, maintained this as
a priority, despite no significant funding increases for health care
this year in the face of facility closures, layoffs and growing wait
lists for surgeries. “We will focus this year on patients,” he said.
“It’s their turn this time.”
|
|
|
|
|
|