Muskoka officials slow hospital plans after doctors' outcry
CBC
After an outcry from doctors, a Muskoka region health care organization says it will consult more with the community before it submits a final plan to the province to redevelop its two hospital sites.
Muskoka Algonquin Healthcare, which operates hospitals in the towns of Huntsville and Bracebridge, has been working on what it calls a capital redevelopment of its facilities. The organization says it wants to build new hospitals to replace the existing ones.
In a statement on Monday, the organization said it wishes to clarify a decision made by its board on July 2 about the redevelopment that may have caused misunderstanding. It said the board granted permission to consultants to begin "detailed planning" for the redevelopment, but that decision doesn't mean there won't be more consultation.
"That means the plan is still being worked on," the statement reads.
The clarification comes after 51 doctors in South Muskoka signed a July 1 letter that criticized plans to redevelop the two hospitals.
The doctors say current plans would reduce hospital beds in Bracebridge, while increasing them in Huntsville. It would also force patients to travel between the two hospitals — Huntsville District Memorial Hospital Site and the South Muskoka Memorial Hospital Site, they say.
"This decision will impact patient care in Muskoka for generations to come," the letter says.
In the letter, the doctors said they are concerned about patient transportation, acute care bed capacity and the long-term viability of the redeveloped Bracebridge site.
"We have been disappointed with the redevelopment process," the letter reads. "The poor communication and lack of transparency has fostered a toxic environment of widespread distrust and frustration, both publicly and within Muskoka Algonquin Healthcare."
The health organization says of the redevelopment: "The main goal is to improve local healthcare by making two bigger hospitals that offer more services than they do now."
Alasdair Smith, vice-president of corporate services for Muskoka Algonquin Healthcare, said consultation is continuing.
"We're going to continue discussions not only with our consultants, but with the community and all the stakeholders, including physicians, patients, our partners in the community, to make sure that the model we are putting forward includes all the input possible," Smith said.
"The delivery of health care is going to change in the next 10 years," he said. "We're going to have to keep talking with people, keep exploring what's going to happen in terms of changes around us and continually evolve the details. It does not end here.
Dr. Shannon Lees, a family doctor in Bracebridge, said the majority of doctors from South Muskoka believe they are not going to get a hospital that will meet the needs of the community in the future.