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Nova Scotia hospitals need $85 million for urgent repairs and maintenance: report

Click to play video: 'NS hospitals face $85 million shortfall for urgent repairs'
NS hospitals face $85 million shortfall for urgent repairs
WATCH ABOVE: Wed, Jun 8: Nova Scotia’s health care system needs revamping while its hospitals are in dire need of $85 million in urgent infrastructure repairs, says the province’s auditor general. Global's legislative reporter Marieke Walsh explains the report and the government's response. – Jun 8, 2016

Nova Scotia’s health care system needs revamping while its hospitals are in dire need of $85 million in urgent infrastructure repairs and maintenance, says the province’s auditor general.

In his spring report released Wednesday, Michael Pickup said concentrating care in the province’s hospitals is something that has to change.

READ MORE: Liberal government spending millions less than promised on health: Global News investigation

“The historical approach to health care delivery, with a heavy focus on hospital-based care is not sustainable given the province’s fiscal situation,” says the report.

“A new approach, with less emphasis on hospitals and more focus on providing the right type of care in the right location is required.”

Pickup’s report said while some change has already occurred, more work is needed to “provide health care to Nova Scotians into the future.”

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He said the lack of money available for capital funding to complete urgent repairs at hospitals across the province is of immediate concern.

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Currently, $29 million is available to address infrastructure needs when about $114 million is needed, according to the report.

READ MORE: N.S. Health Authority says it doesn’t have enough money for repairs

Pickup said the shortfall is for urgent needs alone and doesn’t even consider day-to-day maintenance requirements.

The report says preventative maintenance is needed and cites examples such as elevator work that hasn’t been completed at the South Shore Regional Hospital and steel beams required to hold bricks in place because of mortar deterioration at the Cape Breton Regional Hospital.

It says work is still needed on the leaky roof at the Dartmouth General Hospital, which has already caused damage to the newly renovated floor below it, while a new automated lab at the Victoria General Hospital site is in a building with a risk of leaks from old pipes.

Since 2013, the health department has spent 50 per cent of what it promised to on hospital infrastructure. Global News

Staff at the North Cumberland Memorial Hospital, built in the 1960s, also told auditors the facility has been in need of major infrastructure improvements for almost a decade and that the existing building is “in very poor condition.”

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In addition, the report says the New Waterford Consolidated and North Cumberland Memorial Hospital do not have sprinkler systems.

Pickup says the health system needs to assess the location and use of its facilities throughout the province in order to determine how best to use limited resources to deliver efficient care.

There are 41 hospitals in Nova Scotia, some within 30 minutes of each other, and the Health Department needs to determine whether care can be provided through alternate means in a community or at nearby hospitals, said Pickup.

“The large funding gap … makes it clear that Nova Scotia’s health system cannot reasonably sustain its current facilities,” the report says.

Read the full auditor general’s report here.

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