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McGuinty Government
improving hospital services in Exeter
- Feb. 23, 2007
$1 Million Investment To Increase Patient Access
To The Emergency
EXETER ‑ The McGuinty government is improving access
to health services for Exeter‑area residents by supporting renovations
at the South Huron Hospital Association Emergency Department, Health and
Long‑Term Care Minister George Smitherman announced today.
"Our investment today will help the hospital upgrade its emergency
department so patients will have more access to quality care," said
Smitherman.
The government's $1 million investment will go
towards the renovation of approximately 6,400 sq. ft. of the existing
facility. The renovation will focus on improving the efficiency, safety,
and comfort of the hospital's emergency care by:
The McGuinty
government also provided $139,700 in operating funding to the South
Huron Hospital Association to assist with their operations of the
Emergency Department. This investment was part of the government's
$142.4 million Emergency Department Action Plan, which was announced in
October 2006 to assist with increased capacity in hospitals' emergency
rooms. The funding was provided for:
Recruitment and retention of emergency room physicians, physician
assistants and nurse practitioners to emergency rooms
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Reducing
emergency room waiting times and improve working conditions for
frontline health care workers, and
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Supporting
community‑based services and providing more services in the
community.
"We are pleased with
the government's support for our redevelopment plans," said Ms. Debra
Hunt, Chief Executive Officer of the South Huron Hospital Association.
"This funding is another step towards upgrading and modernizing the
hospital."
"Our government has a
vision of a health care system that is going to help keep Ontarians
healthier, get them good care when they are sick, and be there for them
for generations to come," said Carol Mitchell, MPP for HuronBruce.
"Today's announcement is another step towards making that vision a
reality here in Exeter and rural Ontario."
Other initiatives by
the McGuinty government benefiting the health of Ontarians include:
increasing operating funding to provincial hospitals to $12.9 billion in
2006/07, growing to $14 billion in 2008/09
Reducing wait times
for five key health care services (hip and knee joint replacement,
cataract surgeries, MR1 exams, cancer surgeries and cardiac procedures)
with a recent investment of $222.5 million Increasing medical school
enrollment by 23 percent and funding long‑term care homes to hire 682
new nurses.
Today's initiative is
part of the McGuinty government's plan for innovation in public health
care, building a system that delivers on three priorities ‑ keeping
Ontarians healthy, reducing wait times and providing better access to
doctors and nurses.
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