April 1, 2005
POV hospital in turmoil
"You can count
on them to make the wrong decision"
JANE
GEORGE
As it lurches from one
crisis to the next, Puvirnituq's Inuulitsivik Hospital is close to collapse,
strained by the same burdens and conflicts that are crushing the region's entire
system of health and social services.
With its top management
gutted, essential medical positions vacant or in flux and a staff that's increasingly
stressed and angry, many are asking why Quebec's health and social services
department doesn't step in and help put order back into Inuulitsivik.
Many question the board
of directors' track record in dealing with problems.
"You can count on
them to make the wrong decision," said a doctor. "Their first impulse
is to make the wrong decision because they don't think through the problem first."
Other sources within Inuulitsivik,
who say they can't risk being named in the Nunatsiaq News for fear of losing
their jobs or enduring other repercussions, describe the atmosphere within the
25-bed hospital as "terrible," "poisonous" and "tense."
Relations between Inuit
and Qallunaat employees are at a new low, in a period when violent incidents
against non-Inuit in Salluit, Kangiqsujuaq and Kuujjuaq have hiked unease between
the two groups.
"Inuit and Québécois
are both xenophobic - suspicious of outsiders," said an employee. "Now
it's worse than ever."
The Inuulitsivik health
board has 400 employees working at health and social services clinics in seven
Hudson Bay communities, at the rehabilitation center in Inukjuak, and at the
Inuulitsivik Hospital in Puvirnituq.
The most recent round of
troubles at Inuulitsivik started in mid-January when the acting head of nursing
at the hospital was relieved of his position in a dispute over how to deal with
a long-term mentally ill patient.
This move occurred at around
the same time that several other top administrators at the hospital and at the
Northern Health Module in Montreal, which provides patient services to Nunavimmiut
in Montreal, were removed or did not have their contracts renewed.
Other medical staff, including
doctors, nurses and dentists, as well as administrators at Inuulitsivik, have
left or will soon leave their jobs permanently or for extended periods.
The staff upheavals at
the hospital, which occurred from Jan. 17 to Feb. 5, are euphemistically called
a "special event" in a March 3 communiqué signed by the executive
director, Eli Weetaluktuk.
This communiqué
is written in a form of English that is hard for any outsider to comprehend
because it contains a lot of bureaucratic jargon, awkward phrasing, and many
unexplained references to past actions and events.
Yet hospital employees
understand the gist of its message clearly - that Inuulitsivik is being reorganized
"to ensure consistency and continuity of service." At the same time,
Weetaluktuk is trying to reassure employees "who perform in a moral and
ethical manner" that they are appreciated.
The communiqué was
a last-ditch effort, some say, to quell a mass departure of staff from the hospital.
But many remaining employees
are still upset and nervous, not least of all because a specialist in security
measures, Marty Croitoru, is evaluating the roles and performance of all hospital
staff for Inuulitsivik's board of directors.
According to an employee,
this evaluation has created a "reign of terror" within the hospital
and further escalated tensions.
"It should be done
by an outside, independent group," said one employee.
What should be done, according
to another insider, is to bring in a new top management team, even if they have
to be brought up from southern Quebec or elsewhere in Nunavik on rotation, to
be at the hospital in Puvirnituq daily, to fill the vacuum at the top and assist
Weetaluktuk in his difficult job.
This latest wave of turmoil
is just one of many to affect Inuulitsivik over the past years - from massive
operational deficits to huge payroll errors.
A year ago, Inuulitsivik
was working against a legally-enforced, 99-day deadline for fixing employee
safety problems.
Jeannie May, executive
director of Nunavik's regional board of health and social services, said the
board is "concerned" about the situation at Inuulitsivik.
May said a new strategic
plan for the region's entire health and social services system, which has been
two years in the making, contains many suggestions for improvements at Inuulitsivik.
But May said major changes
are on hold until after the strategic plan is approved and adopted later this
spring.
Chaos at Inuulitsivik is
not the regional health and social services board's sole challenge, either:
the exodus of experienced doctors from the Tulattavik Hospital, which serves
Nunavik's Ungava Bay communities, has left health services there in disarray.
As a result, all pregnant
women from the Ungava coast are sent to Montreal to deliver - a return to a
pattern of health care that hasn't been seen for more than 20 years.
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