Quebec health minister says ER overcrowding improving, union says ERs in ‘crisis’
MONTREAL — The new plan to reduce overcrowding in Quebec emergency rooms is paying off, the province’s health minister said Wednesday, but a major nurses union said that while the measures are laudable, the situation remains critical.
If it weren’t for a series of recent changes to the health network — including new clinics run by nurse practitioners and the expansion of an urgent-care medical line — emergency rooms across the province would be in much worse shape, Christian Dubé told reporters.
“This combination of measures that we have implemented very quickly is making a difference,” the health minister said during a visit to a hospital on Montreal’s South Shore.
Around 10,000 people visit emergency rooms in Quebec every day, he said, a similar number to this time last year. But were it not for the additional measures, Dubé said, that number would be higher.


