Respiratory season hits parts of Canada as head of ER doctors’ group wants better planning
VANCOUVER — The head of a national group of emergency room doctors says he’s “disgusted” that provinces and territories have generally not planned for expected overcrowding in ERs, especially as respiratory season starts to peak in many areas.
Dr. Michael Howlett, president of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians, said that governments and hospital administrators have failed to heed the warnings of health professionals taxed with caring for more patients, including those who often end up in hallways instead of wards where they would get better care.
“I am frustrated that there are people in control of the system that think they know better than many of us with lots of experience on the front lines dealing with patients,” said Howlett, who works in rural and urban ERs for Lakeridge Health based in Oshawa, Ont. He was also chief of emergency medicine there until last September.
“Many emergency physicians who have tremendous administrative and leadership expertise across the country, many are in leadership roles and in many instances have a lot to offer. And no one wants to pay attention. Everyone else thinks they know our specialty, and they don’t.”