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Alberta health workers want Smith to listen and act quickly on province's health woes
CBC
Alberta doctors and nurses are calling for urgent action from the freshly re-elected UCP government to address the province's struggling health system, and they're asking the Premier to listen to voices from the frontlines.
During the election campaign health workers spoke out about overwhelmed ERs and shortages of both hospital staff and family physicians.
Now, with the election settled, many say timing is key.
"It is a crisis situation right now and urgent action is going to be critical," said Calgary ER physician Dr. Katie Lin, one of hundreds of doctors from Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer and Lethbridge who signed recent letters raising the alarm about the state of the province's emergency rooms.
Lin and her colleagues will be watching Danielle Smith's next steps closely.
"I think it will be really, really important that health care worker voices, especially at the frontlines, are heard," she said.
The president of the Alberta Medical Association wrote to Smith on Tuesday, congratulating her on the win and asking to meet as soon as a new health minister is appointed.
"People are devastated. People are angry and exhausted," said Dr. Fred Rinaldi.
"We really, really do need to have some action go with the words."
According to Rinaldi, the group's priorities include more support for existing team-based practices, premiums for after hours work, and improved pay for virtual care.
"They already know what we want. We've only explained it a dozen times to them. So we would be looking forward to starting at a running pace," she said.
Calgary ER physician, Dr. Arun Abbi, wants health officials to free up hospital beds by moving more patients into long-term care, a move Alberta Health Services has said its already working on.
"We're going to have some type of viral illness [in the fall] that's going to hit us and lead to a rise in admissions. And it would be nice to have some capacity so we can withstand that wave," said Abbi.
The shortages of nurses and family physicians need to be addressed too, according to Abbi, who is also president of the Alberta Medical Association's emergency medicine section.