Severely injured patients waited hours in HSC emergency entrance hallway due to absence of beds inside
CBC
Twelve people on stretchers, including a stroke patient with a brain bleed and a trauma patient transported by helicopter, were lined up in the entrance hallway at Manitoba's largest emergency department on Sunday evening because no beds were available inside, a physician at the hospital said.
A shortage of treatment capacity at the Health Sciences Centre has forced patients sick enough to require hospital admission to wait as long as 170 hours — more than a week — in the emergency ward for a bed to open up elsewhere in the hospital, the doctor said.
This, in turn, forced even severely injured patients to wait for hours on Sunday evening in the narrow, inclined passageway between HSC emergency's ambulance drop-off zone and the triage desk inside the waiting room.
"There was an elderly lady who had a hemorrhagic stroke with blood in her brain, who waited in the EMS hallway for hours. There was an elderly male who fell and fractured his hip, who waited in the EMS hallway for hours. There was a lady with facial trauma who was brought in by STARS, who waited in the EMS hallway for hours," said the doctor, who CBC News is not naming because the physician fears retribution for speaking out.
"The standard of care that we're able to provide patients is not what I would expect and is approaching a level of danger and this weekend, I think, crossed over into collapse."
There have been many times over the past few months where patients and staff at all three Winnipeg emergency departments — HSC, St. Boniface and Grace — have described hours-long waits for arriving patients to be seen in emergency and days-long waits for patients already lying in emergency beds to be admitted into hospital.
On Sunday evening, there were no beds available for patients to be seen and treated in emergency, said the HSC doctor, who described a severe shortage of nurses available to care for patients elsewhere in the hospital.
"It's partially the lack of medicine beds. It was also a lack of surgery beds and trauma beds. There were patients who've been waiting for beds more than 170 hours," the doctor said.
The doctor said HSC's emergency department needs an emergency deployment of nurses from elsewhere in the hospital system to attend to patients in medicine and surgery beds.
"I understand that the entire system is strained, but at the moment the Health Sciences Centre emergency department has zero capacity to actually treat patients," the doctor said.
Two other doctors confirmed there were no beds at HSC's emergency department on Sunday evening.
Doctors at Grace and St. Boniface said while the patient situation was not as severe at their emergency departments, there remained a shortage of capacity to treat patients.
Manitoba Shared Health confirmed the situation at HSC was the most serious on Sunday. The provincial agency said while HSC "saw significant demand" over the weekend, it blamed the pile-up of patients on an unusual number of people seeking medical care, rather than on a shortage of staff.
"The demand from these high-need patients was beyond levels seen in the ED in recent months, with more than one instance of multiple patients arriving simultaneously who required care in a resuscitation room," spokesperson Kevin Engstrom said in a statement.