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More Health-Care Specialists, Better Care For British Columbians

09 Jan, 2020 10:24 PM

    New investments in the British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) for sonography and cardiovascular perfusion programs will mean more graduates and better health care for people in British Columbia.

     

    “Students, health-care workers and patients have been calling on government to increase sonography training across the province for years, and we are answering that call with new and expanded programs in Northern B.C., Vancouver Island and now the Lower Mainland,” said Melanie Mark, Minister of Advanced Education, Skills and Training. “We’re investing in BCIT so more students can train for dynamic and rewarding health-care careers and deliver the high-quality care British Columbians rely upon.”


    Government is investing a total of $2.5 million. Funding of $880,000 will support the expansion of BCIT’s diagnostic medical sonography and cardiovascular perfusion programs.


    Eight first-year seats were added to the existing 32 sonography seats in September 2019. Another eight first-year seats will be added in 2020 for a total of 48 first-year seats.


    Capital funding of $1.6 million will allow purchase of the necessary sonography equipment. Beginning in 2020, the cardiovascular perfusion program will expand by three seats – by moving the program intake from seven students every two years to an annual intake of five students.


    “Our government wants to make sure people have even greater access to health care in B.C. We need even more caring, compassionate and well-trained people to make our health system work – from health sciences professionals to physicians and nurse practitioners,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Health. “Our announcement today will address the need for more health-care workers, which is one of the biggest challenges facing the health system.”


    In fiscal 2020-21, the Province will provide $640,000 in operating funding toward northern B.C.’s first sonography program at the College of New Caledonia (CNC). In addition, capital funding of $1.5 million has been provided for equipment and renovations at CNC. In October 2019, the Province also announced Vancouver Island’s first Diagnostic Medical Sonography program at Camosun College with one-time funding of $1.4 million.


    “BCIT was the first post-secondary to offer diagnostic sonography in B.C. and is one of only three institutions in Canada to teach cardiovascular profusion, both of which are critically important specialties in our growing health-care system,” said Kathy Kinloch, president, BCIT. “We are proud of the increasing number of graduates providing quality care to British Columbians, thanks to ongoing support from the provincial government. This funding helps ensure that we continue to provide state-of-the-art equipment and training to more skilled professionals essential to B.C.’s health-care workforce.”


    As B.C.’s population continues to age, health professionals are in increasingly high demand – the 2018 BC Labour Market Outlook projected 82,100 job openings in the health professions by 2028. Cardiovascular perfusionists and sonographers are two of the top 13 health professions identified as in high demand.


    Quotes:


    Janet Routledge, MLA for Burnaby North –

    “I’m delighted that students in my riding will have increased access to top-quality speciality health training at BCIT so they can train for in-demand jobs that will help build fulfilling and rewarding careers. Supporting students in these specialty positions will help deliver the high-quality health care that British Columbians need and deserve.”


    Danny Zaporozan, student, diagnostic medical sonography program, BCIT –

    “As students in the BCIT diagnostic medical sonography program, we not only learn from the best in the industry, we are also learning from instructors who will be our colleagues in the future. Our instructors are sonographers who provide us with hands-on experience for the real world. The training at BCIT is so practical and thorough, it makes me feel fully prepared to make a difference in the health-care world and to be an everyday hero in my job.”

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