Montrealers protest Lachine Hospital's decision to no longer accept ambulances - Action News
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Montreal

Montrealers protest Lachine Hospital's decision to no longer accept ambulances

As of Tuesday, ambulances are being redirected away from Montreal's Lachine Hospital, but a family doctor at the facility says the move is unnecessary and dangerous.

MUHC says move is due to staffing, physican says it's unnecessary and dangerous

Hospital in winter time, with an ambulance out front.
The decision to redirect ambulances away from Lachine Hospital is due to staffing shortages, according to the McGill University Health Centre. (Chlo Ranaldi/CBC)

As of Tuesday, the emergency room at Montreal's Lachine Hospital no longer accepts patientswho arrive by ambulance, but residents are pushing back against that decision, saying itcould put people at risk.

Paramedics will now haveto transport patientsto other hospitals in the area.

The Lachine Hospital'sER will continue to operate every day between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m., for walk-in patients. It will remain closed overnight.

The latest change does not affect people who have appointments at the hospital.

The McGill University Health Centre (MUHC)announced that the ER would close overnight in October 2021. Since then, the services offered from ER operatinghours to paramedics' ability to bringpatients there havevaried.

There is a sign with a message.
Residents gathered on Tuesday to protest the decision to redirect patients in ambulances away from Lachine Hospital. (Chlo Ranaldi/CBC)

The decision to redirect ambulances to nearby hospitals was necessary due to staffing challenges, according to Claudine Lamarre, the MUHC's director of professional services.

"Human resources have been difficult to maintain andto increase," Lamarretold CBC Daybreak host Sean Henry on Monday. "All of this was certainly triggered in part by the COVID pandemic so we've had to really rethink our service in order to answer and take care of our patients and to optimize access."

Lamarre said ensuring there are enough nurses, respiratory therapists and physicians on site has been difficult.

She saidthe service cutis part of the "first step to redefine the Lachine Hospital,"but the news isn't going over well with residents.

On Tuesday, a group gathered in front of the hospital and urged health authorities to reverse their decision.

A group of people are protesting.
Dr. Paul Saba says health authorities are taking resources away from Lachine Hospital and giving them to other health-care facilities. (Chlo Ranaldi/CBC)

According to Dr. Paul Saba, the former president of the hospital's council of physicians who still practises family medicine there, the hospital still has enough staff to deal withpatients arriving by ambulance. He says the change is unnecessary and dangerous.

"Some people call it restructuring but this is not a business. These are peoples' lives that are at stake," said Saba, adding that resources have been directed away from the hospital.

"It's basically taking from a community hospital to relocate downtown."

Speaking with reporters on Tuesday, Lamarre said the MUHC is in touch with the Health Ministry and theUrgences-sant ambulance serviceto make sure closing the hospital to ambulances does not compromise patient care.

"We're putting all of what's necessary in place so that those transfers occur rapidly and safely," she said.

Last fall, work began on a $223-million project to expand the hospital, with completion slated for 2027.

A person is standing.
Claudine Lamarre, the director of professional services for the MUHC, said patients in ambulances will be taken to other hospitals quickly and safely. (Chlo Ranaldi/CBC)

'I find it really sad'

Maja Vodanovic, the borough mayor for Lachine, saidshe's used to services at the hospital being rolled backbut the latest announcement hits harder.

"The news now is that it's permanent," she said. "I find it really sad that we don't have enough doctors."

Vodanovic acknowledged that the state of the Lachine Hospital can make people think twice about seeking care there.

She recalled having to drive a friend to a hospital about a year ago due to a health scare.

A woman speaking to a reporter.
Lachine borough mayor Maja Vodanovic said the community is accustomed to service cuts at their local hospital. Many now automatically head to the gleaming new Glen site of the MUHC. (Jay Turnbull/CBC)

Although the Lachine Hospital was the closest facility, she chose to go to the MUHC's Glen site instead.

"It's a huge hospital and there are all the facilities and it's modern and you automatically go there," she said when talking about the Glen site.

The borough mayor said it's important that stakeholders work together to find a permanent solution to staffing problems and make sure the hospital can serve the community, especially when it comes to family medicine.

With files from CBC Montreal's Daybreak, Lauren McCallum and Chlo Ranaldi