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Ottawa

Why more community paramedics could take the pressure off Ontario ERs

With a number of Ontario emergency rooms forced to close this summer due to staffing crunches, one paramedic chief outside Ottawa says a more community-based approach to health care could help ease the pressure.

Model offers an alternative way to support elderly, vulnerable populations

paramedic chief michael nolan stands in front of his paramedic vehicle
Renfrew County's chief paramedic Michael Nolan says more community paramedic programs which have operated in his part of the province for more than 15 years could help ease the strain on Ontario hospitals. (CBC)

A community-based approach to health care could help ease the pressure on Ontario emergency rooms, one chief paramedic just outside Ottawa says.

The comments from Michael Nolan, director of emergency services for Renfrew County,comeas staff shortages haveforced many emergency departmentsacross the provinceto temporarily close their doors.

Nolan spoke to CBC Radio'sOttawa Morning on Friday about community paramedicine, a model of care that's been in place in the county since 2006.

It involves paramedics identifyingpeople who would be high users of the 911 system or emergency department including elderly patients or people with chronic health issues.

"These are the people who can very easily contribute to the overburden on emergency departments. These are the people who are stuck in hospital, waiting to go home safely or going into long-term care," Nolan said.

Easing strain on 'burdened' system

InRenfrew County, peoplecan contact a community paramedic directly through a toll-free help line, Nolan said,or be virtually triaged by speaking with primary care physicians available 24/7.

Community paramedicscan lower thelikelihood that those higher-use populations will call911 or go to the emergency department by up to 70 per cent, Nolan said.

"We can reduce their utilization of the part of the health-care system that, frankly, is burdened the most today by both the volume and the complexity of care that is required," he said.

Community paramedics can visit and support vulnerable populations without adding more strain on emergency providers something that can be done in the patient's own home, "not in a hospital bed," Nolan said.

A sign tells people an emergency room at a hospital is closed between 6 p.m. and 8 a.m.
The Glengarry Memorial Hospital in Alexandria, Ont., is just one of several hospitals in Ontario that have had to cut service at their emergency departments this summer. (Jacques Corriveau/Radio-Canada)

For community paramedicine to be successful, it should be donein collaboration with primary care physicians, said Dr. David Walker, a professor of emergency medicine and policy studies at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., and a staff member at the Kingston Health Sciences Centre.

In 2011, Walker authored an Ontario government report on the province's challenges with elderly patients staying in hospitals also known as alternate level of care (ALC) patients as they wait to be placed in care programs.

Walker told CBC he thinks community paramedicine is one of the many ways to care forvulnerable elderly populations and reduceunnecessary trips to the emergency room.

"The problems hospitals face these days are not usually hospital problems internally," he said. "It's ALC patients and others who, if we had better home and community care and maybe enhanced long-term care, would not be so much of a problem."

Information about thosepatients could also be relayed to their doctors or health-care providers, Walker said.

"It would be one piece in a tapestry of support," he explained, alongside improved home care support and primary care.

"The more we can do to support people in their homes or their equivalent to their homes, the less likely they are to have the wheels fall off when they go to [the ER]."

Katie Dainty says that while Canada's health-care system is in crisis, incorporating community medicine approaches could be part of the solution. (Submitted by Katie Dainty)

Nowhere else to turn

The health-care system is facing a "crisis" and community paramedicine can help address it, saidKatie Dainty, a research chair at the North York General Hospital and professor at the University of Toronto.

A shortage of primary care physicians means some people with chronic health conditions like diabetes or pulmonary disease have nowhere to turn but the emergency room, Dainty said.

"A community paramedicine program can be that bridge that can really fill the gap between the emergency department and the primary care, and really create a safety net," she said.

"Sometimes it's hard to rethink how we deliver health care. But I think that's really what it's all about."