Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Work begins on IWK Health Centre’s ER expansion, set to double in size

A rendering of the new emergency department at the IWK Health Centre in Halifax. Provided/ Department of Public Works

Nova Scotia said Monday that work has begun at the IWK Health Centre’s new emergency department, which is slated to be finished by March 2025.

Story continues below advertisement

The new facility at the Halifax pediatric hospital will be more than double its current size, according to the province. It will be built on University Avenue, next to the existing parking garage near the front of the Children’s Building.

“The new department will help address the increase in patients being seen at the emergency department and meet new infection prevention and control measures,” the province wrote in a release.

“It will also meet future needs in support of the government’s goal of doubling Nova Scotia’s population by 2060.”

The estimated cost of the project is $102 million, and construction was awarded to EllisDon.

Story continues below advertisement

The IWK, which treats patients from across the Maritimes, has seen a 28 per cent increase in patient volume this fall compared to the same period in 2019.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

On average each day, according to the province, the hospital has 1,020 outpatient/clinic visits, around 100 emergency visits and 20 surgeries.

The hospital recently announced that surgeons and anesthesiologists from the IWK will be able to perform some procedures at Scotia Surgery — a private clinic in Dartmouth — in February 2022.

The clinic’s operating rooms will be used for pediatric non-complex, elective, outpatient surgeries including orthopedic, urology, plastic and dental procedures.

“There is a significant backlog of surgeries so over the next 13 months as we go through this partnership it is anticipated we will be able to take 500 children off the list who are waiting for elective procedures,” said Nova Scotia’s Health Minister Michelle Thompson.

Two unions that represent nurses have expressed concern over this decision, saying it will impact already-strained staffing levels.

Story continues below advertisement

— With a file from Alicia Draus 

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article