100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

NWT health is broken – minister pushes plan to fix it by 2016

Yellowknife, NWT – Health minister Glen Abernethy says his plans to fix the Northwest Territories’ ‘broken’ health system “won’t save a whole whack of cash” – but will make life easier for residents living with sometimes ‘brutal’ healthcare.

Patients in the Northwest Territories currently have to navigate a system of eight separate territorial authorities when seeking care.

Abernethy’s plan, first announced in August and presented at this week’s AGM of the Yellowknife Health and Social Services Authority (YHSSA), calls for the replacement of those eight agencies with a lone, overarching territorial authority, accompanied by advisory groups to provide regions and communities with a voice in healthcare decisions.

He wants the system in place by April 2016.

“We’ve got great people doing incredible work but, by the way we’ve designed our system – which is a very silo-based system, very fractured, very inefficient – even when professionals do their jobs perfectly, the patients don’t always get the best results or the best care,” Abernethy (pictured above) told Moose FM.

“There isn’t one resident, or one patient, in the Northwest Territories who receives their services from one authority. They receive them from multiple authorities on a regular basis and as individuals move through that system now, they’re running up against these artificial barriers we’ve created.

“I’ve heard so many people saying, ‘I just want quality, consistent care, and if I need to go somewhere else, that I and my information will flow seamlessly and there won’t be any barriers to my care.’ Right now, we can’t say that.”

YHSSA chief executive Les Harrison welcomed Abernethy’s plans.

“The people that are front-line staff want to provide support to the people coming through their door, whether or not they’re from Yellowknife or some other community,” said Harrison.

“I think there’s a real openness and I see that not just in Yellowknife but on the part of other authorities as well.”

However, Abernethy did have to calm fears expressed, during the AGM, that smaller communities may lose some of their voice in health decision-making if the changes go ahead.

“We’re talking about one authority with a number of advisory bodies at a regional level, so we can maintain a regional and community voice,” he said.

“This isn’t about centralization or moving positions from one region or community to another. The bottom line of this whole thing is we want to focus on the patient.

“Given our desire is to improve patient care, we have to leave positions where they are – where the patients are. It wouldn’t make any sense to pull positions out of the communities or Yellowknife, because it would actually adversely affect the care we’re trying to improve.”

In a video presentation at the AGM, Dr Ewan Affleck recalled a tuberculosis outbreak in 2007, spread largely because authorities failed to communicate while a single, travelling individual unwittingly spread TB throughout the territory.

Dr Affleck said the “lack of a coherent system plan” allowed the outbreak to take place, adding: “We need shared standards and shared information, because we share the same patients.”

In closing his presentation, Abernethy urged: “We should be able to do better for the people of the NWT.”

Ollie Williams
Ollie Williams
Hello! I'm the one with the British accent. Thanks for supporting CJCD. To contact me, you can email me, find me on Twitter or call (867) 920-4663.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

GNWT seeking input on Fort Smith Airport development plan

The GNWT are working on a new development plan for the Fort Smith Airport and want to hear from the public. They said the plan is aimed at increasing economic growth, “guiding the present” and boosting future airport development. The previous plan was released back in 2005. Officials are working on a new one which they say will include a series of recommendations, analyses and policies for future long term airport development, “typically for a 20-year period.”.

Mineral exploration agreement update coming next week says GNWT

"Canada and the world are engaging with the North amid a rapidly shifting global landscape. This is not a passing moment or trend. It is an inflection point in a long-term shift that represents growing opportunity for the North,” read the announcement issued this after by the GNWT.

The Still Dark Festival comes to Yellowknife for its second year

The Still Dark Festival is being held for the second time in downtown Yellowknife from Feb. 5 to 8. 

Canadian department store Zellers looks to make a resurgence

Canadian department store Zellers is looking to make a comeback. Following the launch of their first standalone location in Edmonton last October, the retailer says they’re actively pursuing new leasing opportunities across Canada -- with a focus on every major Canadian market.

Security guards facing charges after older adult injured in YK

Yellowknife police report that two security guards are facing charges following an alleged assault of an older adult. Officers say the man sustained injuries and was treated in hospital. The names of the suspects have not been made public as the changes have yet to be sworn in court, said RCMP.