Campbellton hospital cuts ICU beds in response to staff shortage - Action News
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New Brunswick

Campbellton hospital cuts ICU beds in response to staff shortage

The intensive care unit at the Campbellton Regional Hospital will be reduced to four beds indefinitely because of a staff shortage.

Unit down to four beds, patients to be transferred as needed

The Vitalit Health Network is temporarily reducing the number of beds in the intensive care unit at the Campbellton Regional Hospital. (Alexandre Silberman/CBC)

The intensive care unit at the Campbellton Regional Hospital will be reduced to four beds indefinitely because of a staff shortage.

Sharon Smyth-Okana, Vitalit Health Network's vice-president of clinical services, said a return to full normal capacity will be announced "as soon as possible."

"There will still be an additional bed available in case of overflow. As needed, we will closely work with other regions in the Network to establish safe transfer corridors," she said in a statement.

Campbellton ICU reducing number of beds

2 years ago
Duration 1:22
Vitalit Health Network says the change is temporary and in response to staffing shortages.

Vitalitsaid thereductionis due to a shortage of nurses. The unit normally offers six beds.

Reduced services

The reduction in services comes as Vitalit and its northern New Brunswick hospitals grapple with a chronic staffing shortage.

Obstetrical and pediatric services were "temporarily interrupted" in April 2020. Over two years later, the health network says delivery services won't be reopening anytime soon.

The emergency department has also experienced temporary closures, forcing residents to drive long distances to other hospitals in the north.

The Campbellton Regional Hospital has experienced other service reductions, including obstetrics. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Last summer, Campbellton's ICU was closed entirely in response to staffing shortages.

New Brunswick patients were transferred either to the Chaleur Regional Hospital in Bathurst or the Edmundston hospital.

Patients from across the Restigouche River in Quebec, including Listuguj First Nation, were given the choice of these hospitals or one in Quebec.

'It has to stop'

Campbellton Mayor Ian Comeau said news of another reduction in services is "very concerning," particularly in a region with an older population.

"It's one after another," he said. "And we fear closures, and closures may come to a full closure here or centralization of services."

Comeau said he spoke with Vitalit on Thursday and was told the situation would be monitored day-by-day.

Campbellton Mayor Ian Comeau says another reduction in services at the regional hospital is concerning. (Alexandre Silberman/CBC)

Gilles LePage, the MLA for Restigouche Westsaid he's skeptical on how long the temporary shortage will be.

"We are questioning the word temporary and we are also questioning the work that's being done by this government on the recruitment files for the nurses or doctors or specialists that we need to cover all hospitals in this province, including the one in Campbellton."

The Restigouche Regional Service Commission wants greater involvement in recruitment and retention efforts to help address the staffing shortage. It is developing a plan and will meet with representatives from the health network on Sept. 1.

Campbellton's hospital serves 25,000 people in health Zone 5 and another 15,000 in Quebec.

Comeau said he strongly rejects any proposals to centralize services in the north, such as relocating specialized services to Bathurst.

"We're going to continue to fight for it," he said.

"No way that we're going to let this stuff all go to one place. It has to stop."