Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. ready to cancel surgeries as flu cases rise

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Nov, 2022 05:39 PM
  • B.C. ready to cancel surgeries as flu cases rise

VICTORIA - Plans to make room for patients with respiratory illnesses by cancelling surgeries are in place in British Columbia hospitals, says Health Minister Adrian Dix, as parents worry about long emergency room waits with sick children.

But the province has yet to reach the point of scrapping operations, said Dix Thursday, as he faced Opposition calls for his resignation.

Parents and the Opposition have decried lengthy waits at emergency rooms across B.C. for children suffering serious respiratory symptoms.

"I've raved about our health-care system my whole life but I see it now slowly crumbling and it scares me and worries me," said Rachel Thexton, who waited hours for medical care after her three kids each fell sick over the past two weeks.

"In my lifetime, I've never seen this level of clear, unavailable resources for anyone, child or adult, to receive health care when they need it in an emergency," she said in an interview.

The Burnaby mother said she faced obstacles getting care for each of her children, including being turned away by her overwhelmed family doctor and by urgent care centres, and enduring long wait times at emergency rooms in Vancouver and Burnaby.

Thexton said her children were eventually seen by doctors, who diagnosed one with pneumonia and the others with severe sinus and ear infections.

She said she is fortunate to have a family doctor, but often isn't able to get an appointment and urgent care has been inaccessible.

"The ER is never my first choice. It's my last resort," said Thexton. "I do not want to bring my child or myself there to overwhelm the system if not absolutely necessary."

The province is battling a difficult season of illness, and measures to provide space for emergency respiratory cases will be taken, Dix said.

He said postponing non-urgent surgeries is one way to create room at hospitals for patients, especially children, who are fighting flu and other respiratory illnesses, including COVID-19.

"We do have other steps we don't want to take, but they would be, for example, delay of non-urgent surgery and then catching up on those quickly thereafter," Dix told reporters at the legislature. "That step is available to us. We haven't done it yet. We knew this was going to be a hard season, and it is."

BC Children's Hospital in Vancouver says it's triaging less-serious patients from its emergency department to a nearby area due to a surge of people with respiratory illnesses.

Christy Hay, the hospital's executive director of clinical operations, says the department is mostly seeing viral illnesses including COVID-19 and increasing cases of influenza and respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV.

She says in an email that the increase in RSV and flu was expected, based on trends in other parts of Canada and around the world.

Dix said the current respiratory illness situation in B.C. is concerning for parents and people awaiting surgery.

"You don't want to delay any surgeries unless you need to," he said. "It's terrible if it's your child or you who has a surgery delayed, whatever the reason is."

BC Liberal Leader Kevin Falcon said he has been hearing daily "horror stories" from parents enduring long waits at emergency departments with their children.

"Why is it that a flu season can cause us to have such a massive crisis in our health system?" he said at a news conference.

"(The government) will not get better results unless they have the courage to make big changes to the system."

The Liberals used question period in the legislature to repeat calls for Dix to quit.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal ministers to address Ottawa protest

Federal ministers to address Ottawa protest
Amid blaring truck horns, the demonstration has included open fires, makeshift feeding stations, encampments and numerous — sometimes profane — anti-government signs.

Federal ministers to address Ottawa protest

Help for farmers being announced after B.C. floods

Help for farmers being announced after B.C. floods
Record rains combined with overflowing rivers in mid-November swamped farmland in several areas of southern B.C. and Vancouver Island. In the Sumas Prairie, a prime agricultural area in Abbotsford, water flooded barns, fields and homes.

Help for farmers being announced after B.C. floods

Kevin Falcon wins B.C. Liberal leadership race

Kevin Falcon wins B.C. Liberal leadership race
Falcon won on the fifth ballot, taking just over 52 per cent of the points available in a sometimes fractious leadership race where the former minister appeared to be the focus of attacks as the perceived front-runner.

Kevin Falcon wins B.C. Liberal leadership race

Lifting COVID measures requires balance: Tam

Lifting COVID measures requires balance: Tam
Vaccine mandates are not meant to be a punishment, federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said Friday at the briefing. Rather they are meant to protect people and incentivize them to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

Lifting COVID measures requires balance: Tam

GoFundMe cancels Ottawa protest fundraiser

GoFundMe cancels Ottawa protest fundraiser
The move could deny participants a vital source of funds as Ottawa braces for a new wave of protesters slated to arrive in the national capital this weekend. GoFundMe says it supports peaceful protest and that it believes that was the initial intention of the Ottawa event.    

GoFundMe cancels Ottawa protest fundraiser

Canfor unions reach deal setting pattern in West

Canfor unions reach deal setting pattern in West
Unifor and the Public and Private Workers of Canada say the four-year deal for 900 workers at Canfor will provide a $5,000 signing bonus plus wage increases of 2.5 per cent, 2.5 per cent, and three per cent in the following three years.

Canfor unions reach deal setting pattern in West