The Nova Scotia Government has issued a plan to improve Emergency Care across the province.
“Emergency care is a priority.” says the plan released this morning. “The global competition for healthcare professionals, the need for more long-term care and our growing population are creating significant pressures.”
Improving Emergency Care Plan
The emergency care improvement plan is designed to move more quickly in:
• ensuring those with the most urgent needs receive care faster
• improving ambulance response times
• providing more places for people to receive care
The plan is also intended to support the dedicated and committed paramedics, doctors,
nurses and other emergency department staff who are doing all that they can, day in and
day out, to provide the best care possible for their patients.
Ensure People with the Most Urgent Needs Receive Care Faster
Flow Lead and Offload Assessment Teams (FLOAT):
• Doctors will lead teams within the ED focused on triaging patients and getting
patients out of ambulances and into the ER faster.
• Patients get care and ambulances get back on the road more quickly
Waiting Room Care Providers, Patient Advocates:
• We have reinforced and expanded our waiting room care providers. They will
reassess patients as patients’ needs change.
• A patient advocate will be in EDs to check on and talk to patients, bring them
blankets and food, and make them more comfortable. A volunteer can play this
role or the waiting room care provider, depending on how busy the ED is.
Virtual Emergency Care:
• Patients with less urgent needs can see a doctor virtually, with a paramedic or
nurse on-site, at more hospitals.
• Three hospitals have tried this, caring for almost 1,300 patients and reducing
wait times to an average of 63 minutes.
Physician Assistants, Nurse Practitioners in Emergency Departments:
• Physician assistants, under a doctor’s supervision, can care for up to 62% of
all patients in emergency departments based on their skills and scope.
• Nurse practitioners diagnose, order and interpret tests, prescribe, perform
procedures and can admit, transfer and discharge patients.
Care Coordination Centre (C3) and Bed Expeditor:
• Healthcare teams get information in real time on what tests and other steps
are needed for patients to get home more quickly. Teams can make faster, more
informed decisions based on bed availability, the status of diagnostic tests, the
movement of patients between care areas, ambulance offloads and staff scheduling.
• The Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians has identified the need for
integrated and coordinated bed management that C3 supports.
• Nova Scotia is the first in the country to have a provincewide health command centre.
Community Fund:
• Communities are getting funding to support their efforts to attract healthcare
professionals, beginning in Cumberland County and Cape Breton.
Ambulances Arriving More Quickly
Training More Paramedics, Giving Tuition Rebates in Return for Service:
• More community college campuses will offer paramedic training, beginning in
Yarmouth in April and Pictou in September. (Campuses in Sydney and Halifax
have programs now.)
• Paramedics who agree to work in Nova Scotia for at least three years will receive
$11,500 back from their $19,500 tuition.
2nd Air Ambulance:
• Patients from Yarmouth and Sydney can travel by air ambulance to Halifax for
routine tests and treatment.
• Ambulances will save significant time on routine transfers and be available in
their communities more.
Medical First Responders:
• The government will fund training for medical first responders who are in
communities and may be the first to arrive on the scene.
More Places for People to Receive Care
(Reducing Pressure on Emergency Departments)
Collaborative Practices Seeing More Patients:
• The Dalhousie family medical clinics, in partnership with government and Nova Scotia
Health, will expand to more communities. The Dal clinics have already taken on
3,500 more patients.
• Rapid patient onboarding teams will save health providers time (about 90 minutes
per patient) and paperwork that they can spend instead on patient care.
• New collaborative care teams are forming in 14 communities, and 37 more
are getting funding to help them see more patients.
• Graduating residents and providers are getting help to set up practices.
More Services in Pharmacies:
• More pharmacists will have dedicated clinic hours to assess and treat minor joint
and muscle pain, eczema, cold sores, urinary tract infections and shingles; provide
care for chronic diseases like diabetes; renew prescriptions; and provide contraception.
• The government is working with the Pharmacy Association of Nova Scotia
on expanding pharmacy services in more communities and building on the
PharmacyPlus success. innovationhub.nshealth.ca/projects/pharmacist-walk-in-clinic
Virtual Care Nova Scotia Expansion:
• Patients can now schedule appointments for evenings and weekends.
• Doctors from outside Nova Scotia can now provide virtual care.
• Virtual care patients report a 4.6 out of 5 satisfaction rate.
Urgent Treatment Centres
• Patients get appointments more quickly for unexpected, non-life-threatening
health issues.
• The latest centre opened at Lillian Fraser Memorial Hospital in Tatamagouche
January 16.
Mobile Primary Care Clinics:
• Pop-up clinics are now happening every weekend.
• Patients and the healthcare providers report 4.9 out of 5 satisfaction rates.
Mobile Respiratory Clinics
• Respiratory patients are now receiving care, including evening and weekends,
in Sydney and Antigonish. The clinics will soon be available in more communities
at existing COVID testing sites.
Digital Front Door:
• Patients can soon find the right services for their needs and where they are
offered on an app on their phone.