As birthing unit slowly reopens, many parents still expected to give birth in Edmonton until April
CBC
The N.W.T. health authority is estimating by March 31 a total of 86 residents will have traveled to Edmonton to give birth. Thirty five of them from communities outside Yellowknife.
Service reductions at the Stanton Territorial Hospital birthing unit since December has forced dozens of expectant parents to travel for their babies delivery.
However, the health authority is working in phases to restore birthing services for some expectant parents by Feb. 21.
This excludes 13 first-time parents and Nunavummiut who will still be sent to Edmonton from Feb. 22 to April 1. Five of them are from communities outside Yellowknife.
This number was originally higher – 20 people – but has since dropped because of residents who left the territory or were shifted to regional delivery within the N.W.T.
There are 35 people who are giving birth for a second time or who have scheduled Caesarean sections that take place in Yellowknife between Feb. 21 and March 31, wrote Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority spokesperson David Maguire in an email.
This is expected to alleviate some of the child-care challenges patients struggled with when their deliveries were shifted to Edmonton this past December, he said.
Two people who could have delivered in Yellowknife for the initial reopening of birth services are still planning to proceed with plans to give birth in Edmonton.
If people have established new supports in the Edmonton area and wish to proceed with that plan, it will be assessed on a case-by-case basis, said Maguire.
Maguire said Alberta Health Services, the N.W.T. health authorities partner in the Edmonton area, have "truly gone above and beyond and rallied to support our residents in this time with both clinical and associated supports. We thank them or their great work."
The health authority said it was not aware of any known issues that affected prenatal and postpartum health, but acknowledged the child-care challenges that birth evacuations presented to families who already have children.
"We are aware of the inconvenience and logistical challenges this has presented for some families," Maguire said.
The Northern Birthwork Collective, an advocacy group for reproductive justice and birthwork has been raising awareness of how birth evacuations affect birthing persons and their communities.
The collective continues to connect people who are being transferred to Edmonton.