January 20, 2006
Baffin hospital flunks
accreditation review
GN gives $2.3 million
cash transfusion to battered BRH
NUNATSIAQ NEWS
The ailing Baffin Region
Hospital will get $2.3 million worth of extra money from the GN, after the Canadian
Council on Health Services Accreditation refused to grant "accreditation"
to the facility.
In simple words, this means
the BRH does not meet national standards.
The Baffin hospital has
been accredited by the health services council since the early 1990s. This is
the first time they've managed to flunk the test.
To get "accreditation"
from the council, a hospital must meet certain minimum standards of service.
The most important criteria are quality and risk to patients, which the council
defines the as the risk of "danger, loss or injury."
"For health service
organizations, 'danger, loss or injury' may include adverse events related to:
the health and well-being of clients, staff and the public; property; reputation;
environment; organizational functioning (including quality improvement); financial
stability, market share and other things of value," the council says in
its 2005 accreditation deadlines.
After reviewing a hospital,
the council uses a scoring system to judge the institution according to five
levels. The lowest level, "non-acreditation" is given to hospitals
that gain a score of 4.5 in fewer than 11 areas.
To fix the mess, the BRH
will use the $2.3 million to hire 26 more employees: housekeepers, clerk interpreters,
records clerks, a handyman, more registered nurses, and more technical staff.
The poor rating from the
health services council comes as no surprise, however, to GN health administrators.
Three evaluation reports
done between August, 2004 and December, 2005 found that services have been deteriorating
at the hospital.
A GN press release says
those reports found that:
- Risk management systems
need to be updated;
- There are too few staff
to serve Baffin's growing population;
- Information management
(translation: "record-keeping"), has not kept up with growth in
demand.
In the press release, the
GN says the extra money will help bring the quality of care at the hospital
up to national standards.
They've already started
hiring new housekeepers and clerk-interpreters, and will start recruiting in
March to fill more jobs.
Meanwhile, the GN has hired
David Ramsden, a veteran bureaucrat with the Government of the Northwest Territories,
to serve as deputy minister of Nunavut's Department of Health and Social Services
until a nation-wide head-hunting effort turns up somebody willing to do the
job permanently.
Ramsden worked for the
GNWT in the 1990s as its deputy minister of Municipal and Community Affairs,
and as deputy minister of Health and Social Services.
Bernie Blais, who was appointed
deputy minister of Nunavut's health department on July 9, 2003, told the GN
last fall that he's quitting his job. Blais leaves for good next week, on Jan.
27.
The GN hired Caldwell and
Partners, a large executive head-hunting firm, to find a permanent deputy minister
for its health department. That process could take up to six months.
TOP
|