Niagara Health System

The Niagara Health System, or Niagara Health (NH) is a multi-site hospital amalgamation, comprising five sites serving over 450,000 residents across the 12 municipalities making up the Regional Municipality of Niagara, Canada.

Niagara Health System
Geography
LocationRegional Municipality of Niagara, Ontario, Canada
Organization
Care systemPublic Medicare (Canada) (OHIP)
TypePublic
Services
Emergency departmentSite Dependent
BedsOver 800
History
Opened2005
Links
Websiteniagarahealth.on.ca
ListsHospitals in Canada

History

Niagara Health is the result of a government directive, in 1999, to amalgamate the five hospital sites serving the Regional Municipality of Niagara. At that time, the St. Catharines community was served by the Shaver Hospital, for chronic care, the Hotel Dieu Hospital, a Catholic acute care facility managed by the Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph, and the St. Catharines General Hospital. With amalgamation, the Hotel Dieu was placed under the governance and management of Niagara Health and renamed the Ontario Street Site. Meanwhile, the Shaver was assumed by Hotel Dieu management and renamed Hotel Dieu Shaver Health and Rehabilitation Centre.[1]

In 2013, Niagara Health opened the one-million-square-foot St. Catharines Site, replacing the St. Catharines General and Ontario Street sites.[2]

In 2018, the Town of Niagara-on-the-Lake assumed ownership of the Niagara-on-the-Lake Site.[3]

Niagara Health is one of Ontario's largest hospital systems, with 4,800 employees, 600 physicians and 850 volunteers. As of 2019, its annual operating budget was approximately $550 million.[4]

Facilities

About

Since its inception, Niagara Health has been involved in several noteworthy controversies.

NH has been under an Ontario Nurses Association (ONA) censure since February 2003. According to an Ontario Nurses Association press release in June 2007, censuring is ONA's nationwide public reproach of a health agency due to the negative impact on staff and patient care, of poor labour relations and administrative practices. The censure was lifted in December 2010.[5]

In October 2008, the Niagara Health System Medical Staff Association passed a non-confidence vote in the NHS leadership by a vote of 136 to 76.[6]

On May 17, 2010, the Ontario Health Coalition after conducting public hearings in March 2010 issued a report calling on the provincial government to send an investigator to the Niagara Health System, stating the following reasons:

Witnesses in Niagara described the poorest access to hospital beds and emergency department care of all the regions we visited. Cuts have been and are being implemented without any protections for resident access to care and without funding agreements, functional protocols and enablers in place. This panel observes that hospital care in Niagara is chaotic, perilously short-staffed and under-resourced. The hospital system has lost public confidence.[7]

gollark: That would kind of defeat the point of the trolley problem.
gollark: That post and the comments seem to provide a decent enough explanation, yes.
gollark: You would expect *some* other stargate network, since it was discovered... a few thousand years, or something, ~~since~~ before the present day in-setting and technology has improved since then.
gollark: And why hasn't someone else tried to/succeeded in figuring out the wormholes?
gollark: How is there *not* massive price gouging on the transit network anyway? I'm sure this was explained at some point, but I forgot the explanation, sooo...

References

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