Saskatchewan

Overcrowded hospitals creating makeshift rooms, says Sask. NDP

The Opposition says hospitals in Regina and Saskatoon are continuing to struggle with overcrowding.

Health critic says Saskatoon hospital using IV poles and sheets for privacy

The number of mental health emergencies is increasing dramatically according to a report by the Waterloo-Wellington LHIN. (CBC)

The Opposition says hospitals in Regina and Saskatoon are continuing to struggle with overcrowding.

The NDP's health critic Danielle Chartier said that as recently as this week, there were dozens more patients than beds in Saskatoon hospitals.

To cope, she says, a doctor at Royal University Hospital told her they are creating makeshift rooms to give patients some privacy.

"They are building forts in hallways with IV poles and sheets -- forts that my kid can make -- and calling them 'pods' and housing patients in the hallway," Chartier said. "It's still hallway medicine even if you build a fort around them."

Opposition health critic Danielle Chartier says a doctor has told her they are creating makeshift rooms to give patients privacy at Royal University Hospital. (Chanss Lagaden/CBC News)

The health minister says he is unaware of IV poles and bedsheets being used to create makeshift rooms, however Dustin Duncan says there have been concerns raised about hospital capacity in both Regina and Saskatoon recently.

"No question that our emergency departments are very busy places," Duncan said.

He says that's why the government continues to work to reduce demand in emergency rooms, by diverting non-urgent patients who could be treated in a more appropriate place.

Duncan says last year, nearly 45 per cent of the people who showed up at the ER -- were not urgent cases.