Empty space in new Windsor-Essex hospital could be used as surge capacity in future pandemics: Officials
CBC
To avoid field hospitals held together with tarps and duct tape in future outbreaks or pandemics, the new acute care hospital in Windsor-Essex will be equipped with large sections of unused space to allow for surge capacity.
New information was released Tuesday afternoon about the hospital project, as Paul Landry was named project director. Currently, he's overseeing Stage 2 of the process that outlines what programs, staffing and equipment is needed for the new facility on County Road 42, near Windsor Airport.
There's a Ministry of Health expectation, Landry said, that the new Windsor hospital contain empty rooms "for the future." The unused space would be a part of long-term needs and projections up to 2038, but could also serve as space in the interim.
"That will [also] provide us this flex capacity should we need those additional beds to surge into in response to perhaps a future pandemic," said Landry.
Those extra beds and empty spaces would be "fully equipped" with ICU capabilities "ready to open up," as well as in-patient beds, Landry added.
"The goal is as we move forward, we don't want to have to open up field hospitals, we don't want tarps and duct tape as being the way we provide care and that's what the new hospital brings," said Windsor Regional Hospital (WRH) CEO David Musyj.
WRH opened up a field hospital at the St. Clair College Sportsplex in the spring of 2020 as the region grappled with the first wave of COVID-19.
Landry brings the experience of overseeing other large-scale hospital builds across Canada, including a $3-billion hospital redevelopment project in Montreal with 772 beds, and a 475-bed teaching hospital in Vancouver.
"In fact, some of the new hospitals even shelve in a complete floor to add space for two inpatient units," said Landry. "We could proceed with fitting them out, construction the rooms and equipping all of the rooms in a much shorter period of time than if we were to try to add another floor on the top of the hospital."
With the second of five project phases currently in progress, the beginning of construction isn't planned to happen until the summer of 2026, but that's a rough timeline.
"What we can't control are the periods of time after we make a major document submission to the Ministry [of Health," said Landry, which happens at the end of every stage.
It's unclear right now how many beds the new hospital will have, but Musyj assures the public it will be more than the two hospitals currently have combined.
"It's definitely going to be a lot more than we have now," said Musyj. "They're not going to be crammed in spaces that are not technically meant for patient care that we're having to use now."
Cost is also up in the air since the new hospital is years away from construction. The Ministry of Health pegged the price tag at more than $1 billion, while Windsor Regional Hospital has previously estimated the cost to be around $2 billion, Musyj said.
Burlington MP Karina Gould gets boost from local young people after entering Liberal leadership race
A day after entering the Liberal leadership race, Burlington, Ont., MP and government House leader Karina Gould was cheered at a campaign launch party by local residents — including young people expressing hope the 37-year-old politician will represent their voices.
Two years after Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly declared she was taking the unprecedented step of moving to confiscate millions of dollars from a sanctioned Russian oligarch with assets in Canada, the government has not actually begun the court process to forfeit the money, let alone to hand it over to Ukrainian reconstruction — and it may never happen.