Manitoba adds 68 transitional beds to free up emergency department space

Manitoba is adding dozens of beds in hospitals, a personal care home and a shelter as part of the government’s latest effort to free up space in overwhelmed emergency departments.

The province is opening 68 transitional beds, health minister Uzoma Asagwara said.

The beds will temporarily accommodate patients discharged from the emergency department while they await a longer-term placement at a different health-care facility or their home.

While these types of beds are often reserved for seniors, including those panelled for admission to a personal care home, the government also intends to use them for other patients awaiting treatment, such as physiotherapy, and those who may otherwise be homeless if discharged.

Asagwara is confident the new beds will open up space for the high-acuity patients stuck waiting for a bed in emergency departments and, in turn, reduce wait times.

“It’s going to allow for people to leave hospital in a more timely way and free up the beds that people who are going through the emergency room, maybe folks after surgery, really need,” said Asagwara, who’s expected to speak further about the plan at a news conference Friday.

Twenty-five of the beds will be at Holy Family Personal Care Home in Winnipeg to support seniors awaiting a spot at the personal care home of their choice.

The province is setting up 15 beds at Selkirk Regional Health Centre and eight at Winnipeg’s Misericordia Health Centre for seniors and other patients receiving care. 

The remaining 20 beds are being assigned to the 24/7 safe space run by St. Boniface Street Links. The facility is receiving patients who don’t have housing readily available to them.

“It’s important to have a diverse type of bed base in community and in hospital so that we can meet the varying needs of Manitobans,” Asagwara said.

Around half of the 68 transitional beds are already in use, the government said.

Waits ‘definitely’ down in Selkirk

At Selkirk’s hospital, the 15 transitional beds are already admitting patients and the wait times in the emergency department have “definitely” fallen, said Interlake-Eastern Regional Health Authority CEO Marion Ellis.

Around a week after the beds’ opening, Ellis said she got a “good news” phone call about something the hospital hadn’t encountered on a weekend in years.

“There were no patients on emergency stretchers that were to be admitted onto in-patient beds because anybody who needed to be admitted was already admitted,” she said.

Patient flow remains a concern, Ellis said, but it shows progress when every stretcher in the emergency department is open and available. 

“I don’t want us to take our foot off the pedal.”

She’s also encouraged the hospital has found the staff for the majority of positions, she said.

A sign that reads 'Selkirk Regional Health Centre' is seen off the side of the road.
The Selkirk Regional Health Centre has received 15 of the 68 transitional beds announced by the province on Friday. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

The new transitional beds, which cost the provincial government $1.7 million in capital costs and $3.7 million in annual operating costs, are on top of the 151 new acute care beds funded in this year’s provincial budget. Those new beds, some of which haven’t opened yet, include 50 at the Health Sciences Centre, 36 at St. Boniface Hospital and 31 at Grace Hospital, all in Winnipeg.

Although the new beds are supposed to reduce wait times, patients in those hospitals are experiencing longer waits on average than a year ago.

The median wait time for emergency and acute care centres in Winnipeg increased to 3.6 hours in June from 3.52 hours in May. It’s a jump from 2.87 hours in June 2023.

Asagwara continued to blame the former Progressive Conservative government for closing emergency departments and cutting some hospital beds, despite the NDP being elected 10 months ago.

The long waits for care is a problem that didn’t start overnight, the minister said.

“The larger improvements that we all want to see is going to take more time, but we’re taking steps in the right direction each and every day,” Asagwara said.

“We are seeing improvements around vacancy rates, as one example. We’re seeing improvements in terms of people having options and accessing care.”

A woman in a black blazer and circular-framed glasses is pictured.
Dr. Lauren Lapointe-Shaw said transitional beds indeed empty out space in emergency departments, but there’s sometimes waits for those beds themselves. (Michael Wong/Women’s College Hospital)

Dr. Lauren Lapointe-Shaw, a general internist physician and health services researcher at University of Toronto, said there’s minimal research into the long-term impacts of transitional beds, but she said anecdotally in Ontario “we did witness some degree of an emptying out of our long-stay patients who are in these alternate level of care beds as they filled up those transitional beds.

“However, since that time, now sometimes we have to wait for the transitional beds as well,” she added, though she explained the waits are often short. 

Lapointe-Shaw also questions if there’s enough long-term care beds and home care staff to accommodate the patients after they’re discharged from a transitional bed.

Opening more of these beds “may help in terms of freeing up hospital beds, but in some ways it’s likely to be temporary, as the volumes of older adults with more and more comorbidities, more health complexities, we know continue to rise over time,” Lapointe-Shaw said.

The province says the remaining 33 transitional beds that haven’t opened yet should be operational by the end of the year.

Source