Staff shortage leads to long wait times for ultrasounds at Kamloops hospital - Action News
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British Columbia

Staff shortage leads to long wait times for ultrasounds at Kamloops hospital

The Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloopshas such a severe backlog of patients waiting forultrasounds that some patients are being asked to go to other cities for the procedure.

Royal Inland Hospital is short on sonographers and 1,800 patients are waiting for appointments

The hospital is trying to recruit more sonographers. In the meantime, patients with non-urgent medical issues who are able to travel arebeing asked to go to other cities for treatment. (CBC)

The Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloopshas such a severe backlog of patients waiting forultrasounds that some patients are being asked to go to other cities for the procedure.

The backlog is a result of the hospital being short between two and three full-time sonographers. One of the ultrasound clinics in the community is also short-staffed, said Kim Perris, health services director for medical imaging with Interior Heath West.

There are currently about 2,500 patients who are booked for ultrasounds and another 1,800 patients who are waiting for an appointment, she said.

The wait timefor electiveor non-urgentultrasound requests is up to a year, Perris told Daybreak Kamloops host Shelley Joyce.

"It is significant enough that we're looking outside of Kamloops to see if someone elsecan assist with this and decrease the backlog,"she added.

Perris said thehospital is trying to recruit more sonographers. In the meantime, patients with non-urgent medical issues who are able to travel arebeing asked to consider getting the procedure in another city.

"We'd save those appointments for those patients who really do have an urgent need or who can't travel outside of the community," Perris said.

Patients who do choose to travel to another city will have to cover the cost of their own transportation.

Hospitals in Vernon, Revelstokeand Pentictonhave agreed to take on patients from Kamloops.

However, Perris noted Vernon's hospitalis starting to fill up and may not be able to accept additional patients for much longer.

More graduates needed

The shortage of sonographersis because there aren't enough graduatesto keep up with the vacancies in hospitals, Perris said.

However,BCIThas expanded their sonography program in the past year from 32 students to 40, and The College of New Caledonia in Prince George started a program that admitted eight students in January.

But these students need to be in a clinical setting to practice scanning on patients, and training takes a long time, Perris said.

"We really rely onthese clinical training sites and I think everyone has been kind of taxed," she said.

Frustrated patient

Kamloops residentBruce Thomsonhad a difficult time getting an elective ultrasound after his doctor orderedone for him last September.

He struggled for seven months to secure an appointment at the hospital in town and at other locations, he said.

"I started thinking this is crazy," Thomson said.

Thomson's doctor updated his status to urgent in March, so he was recently able to get an ultrasound in Vernon. That appointment cameonly after he was told he would have to wait another six months in Kamloops, he said.

"I'm feeling like this is a system in collapse," he said.

"[In] my experience, it was exceedingly difficult to actually get through to human beings in the system."

With files from Daybreak Kamloops