Quebec to open two nurse-run clinics in Montreal to ease emergency room crisis
MONTREAL — Quebec’s health minister on Tuesday promised that his new three-point plan to ease emergency room overcrowding will show results in a few weeks, as ER doctors warned that the network has reached a “breaking point.”
Christian Dubé said his 20-member health-care “crisis unit” has been meeting frequently, adding that he toured several of the province’s hospitals last week to listen to workers’ concerns. His plan, he said, is to quickly open two clinics in Montreal run entirely by nurse practitioners, to extend the 811 health-care hotline to pediatric patients, and to free up hospital beds more quickly.
The solutions aren’t new, Dubé said, but they just haven’t been implemented over the years for a variety of reasons.
“Our challenge is to implement them throughout the network; it’s all in the execution,” Dubé said, adding that while the situation in Quebec’s ERs isn’t unique in Canada, it’s “not an excuse for not having done what we should have done.”

