Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Virtual emergency care launching at four hospitals in B.C.'s Interior

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2025 11:56 AM
  • Virtual emergency care launching at four hospitals in B.C.'s Interior

Patients seeking emergency care at four hospitals in British Columbia's Interior may now be seen by a doctor working virtually in a pilot project aimed at modernizing rural health services.

The Interior Health authority says in a statement the pilot will be used in hospitals emergency departments in Lillooet, Clearwater, Nakusp and Princeton, all locations that have been closed periodically because of staffing shortages. 

It says the care teams will begin the new model a few nights a week, while continuing with in-person care on other evenings, but the authority says that will stretch to seven evenings a week starting in the new year. 

As part of the pilot, a doctor will provide in-person care at one facility, while offering virtual support at three other emergency departments, and an emergency nurse will determine the level of care needed for those departments that don't have doctors on-site. 

The statement says for life-threatening emergencies, an in-person physician remains on standby for each community. 

Interior Health president Sylvia Weir says in the statement that the soft rollout gives the care teams and patients time to get familiar with the process and share their feedback. 

“Patient safety remains our key focus, and that is why we continue to approach the modernization of rural emergency services with care and consideration,” Weir says. 

The hospital in Nakusp has already been using the program for two nights a week.

Interior Health says the sharing of physician coverage over multiple sites allows for a "more sustainable work life" for health professionals, as well as collaboration between rural doctors and better access to expert care for rural residents.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nicole Osborne

MORE National ARTICLES

Five women sexually assaulted in B.C. 'grateful' for lawsuit victory, lawyers say

Five women sexually assaulted in B.C. 'grateful' for lawsuit victory, lawyers say
Lawyers for five women who were sexually assaulted in Vancouver decades ago say their clients are grateful they won a civil lawsuit against a man acquitted of the crimes due to state misconduct. The B.C. Supreme Court awarded the five plaintiffs $375,000 each in damages from Ivan Henry for attacks in the early 1980s, in a case that set off decades of legal battles over his wrongful conviction, for which he won $8 million in his own civil lawsuit in 2016.

Five women sexually assaulted in B.C. 'grateful' for lawsuit victory, lawyers say

Liberal leadership candidates make rival defence spending pledges

Liberal leadership candidates make rival defence spending pledges
Contenders to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader are attempting to one-up each other over how quickly they'd meet Canada's defence spending commitment to NATO. Both Chrystia Freeland and Karina Gould vowed Thursday to bring Canada's military spending up to the equivalent of two per cent of national GDP by 2027 — five years ahead of Trudeau's timeline and three ahead of rival candidate Mark Carney's plan.

Liberal leadership candidates make rival defence spending pledges

One in five recent Canadian immigrants lived below poverty line in 2022, says StatCan

One in five recent Canadian immigrants lived below poverty line in 2022, says StatCan
StatCan says a family or a person lives in poverty if they can't afford the cost of a basket of goods and services that represents a basic standard of living. They are in deep poverty if their income falls below 75 per cent of that threshold.

One in five recent Canadian immigrants lived below poverty line in 2022, says StatCan

Community groups say Canadians are scared as Trudeau warns hate crimes are rising

Community groups say Canadians are scared as Trudeau warns hate crimes are rising
As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other leaders warn of a rising tide of hate around the world, community groups in Canada say they're getting more and more calls from frightened people. At a media availability with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk in Warsaw last month, Trudeau said antisemitism is on the rise globally, and especially since Hamas' terrorist attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Trudeau was in Poland to mark the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

Community groups say Canadians are scared as Trudeau warns hate crimes are rising

Liberal race sucked into Trump's 'gravitational field,' strategists say

Liberal race sucked into Trump's 'gravitational field,' strategists say
Liberal leadership hopefuls are pivoting and responding to the attention-consuming existential threats to Canadian trade posed by U.S. President Donald Trump — a preview of what the next federal election is going to look like, according to Liberal strategists.

Liberal race sucked into Trump's 'gravitational field,' strategists say

B.C. faces child welfare social work 'crisis,' porn disrupts video announcing report

B.C. faces child welfare social work 'crisis,' porn disrupts video announcing report
British Columbia's children's representative says child welfare social workers in the province are "in a state of crisis" and it will likely take a decade to fix things, even with committed efforts. But an online news conference with Jennifer Charlesworth after the report was released was interrupted when a participant shouted racial slurs and then began showing a pornographic video.

B.C. faces child welfare social work 'crisis,' porn disrupts video announcing report