Ottawa

Outaouais voters looking for health-care remedy

With just three days until the Quebec election, advocates say voters in the Outaouais region are looking for solutions to salvage the region's failing health-care system.

Staff shortages, lack of resources top of mind, advocates say

Staff shortages and a lack of resources at hospitals will be top of mind when Quebec voters go to the polls Monday, health-care advocates say. (Marc-André Cossette/CBC)

With just three days until the Quebec election, advocates say voters in the Outaouais region are looking for solutions to salvage the region's failing health-care system.

Throughout the campaign, candidates have promised to fix staff and resource shortages at the region's hospitals.

"Health care has been debated like it never has before," said Andrew Gibson, a member with the health advocacy group Santé Outaouais 2020. 

"There has been a running series of crises, the crisis of avoidable deaths," Gibson said. "These deaths could be avoided, but somehow, because there is so much stress on the system, people are falling through the cracks."

The opposition Coalition Avenir Québec is promising to build a new hospital in western Quebec within its first term, while the Quebec Liberals promise to spend money on hiring more health-care workers in the region.

Voters in the region have until Oct. 1 to decide how best to address the health-care crisis.

'It was a nightmare'

Gatineau resident Stephanie Bond said after experiencing the region's health-care system first-hand, she's been paying closer attention this election.

This is something no one wants to live through.- Stephanie Bond, Gatineau resident 

Bond said she spent countless hours at various hospitals with her mother, who's battling cancer and uses a wheelchair. She said some of the hospitals weren't fully accessible. 

"It was a nightmare, in terms of accessibility and also transfers from one centre to another," she told CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning. 

Bond said the hospitals were short on both beds and staff, and her mother had to wait six months for long-term care. 

"I still wake up, four years after this experience and two-and-a-half years after my mom's passing, thinking, 'Does my mom have enough water tonight? Will someone be there to turn her in the night?' This is something no one wants to live through."

Stephanie Bond, left, and Andrew Gibson, right, say health care is a top concern for many voters in the Gatineau area. (CBC)

Reliance on Ontario 

Both Gibson and Bond said the Quebec government relies too heavily on Ontario's medical system to treat patients from Gatineau. 

At the same time, Quebec health professionals are choosing to work in Ontario.

"That needs to be addressed" Bond said. "We are losing our best people across the border. I advocate strongly for higher salary and a special status fort this region so we can keep our best health-care workers at our side."