Nova Scotia opens healthcare data to the public

Sign points to hospital emergency room entrance

Queens General Hospital. Photo Ed Halverson

The provincial government is following through on a promise to make up-to-date healthcare data available to Nova Scotians.

Residents can now see the daily or most current information for hospitals across the province for a wide range of stats like hospital occupancy, emergency department visits and number of surgeries performed.

Information is presented on an interactive dashboard and gathered from several sources including hospital inpatient, surgical and emergency data bases, continuing care home support and long-term care reports and EHS.

The data contains no information which could identify individual patients.

Government announced the website would be coming as part of their Action for Health plan back in April.

In a release, Health and Wellness Minister Michelle Thompson said, “Change won’t happen overnight. But by sharing this information now, we are holding ourselves accountable to make sure change happens and the system improves in the areas most important to Nova Scotians.”

The website also tracks continuing care services such as the number of people waitlisted for home support and how many have been admitted to long-term care facilities.

EHS is providing weekly numbers of calls, response times and average time it takes to offload patients at each hospital.

The Action for Health website also shows the most current numbers on doctor and nurse recruitment and retention and the number of Nova Scotians without a primary care provider.

The website can be found at novascotia.ca/actionforhealth.

Reported by Ed Halverson 
E-mail: edhalversonnews@gmail.com
Twitter: @edwardhalverson

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Province inching closer to releasing healthcare fix timelines

A man sitting at a desk speaks into a microphone

Tim Houston addresses reporters following cabinet meeting June 16 2022. Photo: screen grab from Zoom

Nova Scotia’s premier says timelines to address healthcare are coming soon.

The PC government released their Action for Health plan in April which identified core issues and offered six broad solutions for the provincial healthcare system.

Opposition members have been critical of the plan for not providing timelines to go along with the solutions.

Following a cabinet meeting Thursday, Tim Houston told reporters they’re still working on it.

“We did commit to add some dates and some benchmarks and that work is ongoing,” said Houston. “I think the commitment was Nova Scotians would start to see that heading into early summer, which we’re at now and I suspect that those things are coming soon.”

Tim Houston campaigned and won the August 2021 provincial election on a promise to fix healthcare.

His government inherited a system with tens of thousands of Nova Scotians on a family doctor waitlist, ambulances lined up and waiting hours to offload patients at hospitals, emergency rooms closed for staffing shortages, long backlogs of people waiting for surgeries and a laundry of other issues.

Houston admits there is a lot of work to do but some of the changes are already having a positive impact.

“There’s lots of anecdotal stories about how difficult things are in the healthcare system. There’s also lots of anecdotal stories about how things are improving. I’ve certainly heard from paramedics who will tell me, at the end of a day I was able to do this many more calls because I didn’t have to do these transfers,” said Houston. “Now they’ll be saying, I was able to do this many more calls because I was able to offload my patient. So, there’s a lot of positive anecdotal stories as well.”

The premier was referring to the new direct to triage policy that came into effect June 1 allowing paramedics to leave low risk patients in the care of waiting room staff instead of staying with them until they are seen by a doctor.

The PCs also made permanent a pilot project launched under the previous government which created a fleet of vehicles dedicated to patient transfers.

Houston says those are a couple of examples of changes that are improving healthcare for Nova Scotians and there are more to come.

“I would say to Nova Scotians that they should know, number one, that this is our number one focus as a government,” said Houston. “They should see that commitment from the amount of changes we’ve made which have come from healthcare workers. They should see that commitment in the plan that’s been put forward before them and look, they’ll start to see that in their communities, and some of that is happening already.”

Reported by Ed Halverson 
E-mail: edhalversonnews@gmail.com
Twitter: @edwardhalverson

To listen to the broadcast of this story, press play below.