Published Mar 23, 2024 • Last updated 3 hours ago • 2 minute read
Then-minister of Infrastructure Prasad Panda (centre) speaking at the future site of the South Edmonton hospital along 127 St. and 20 Ave. SW in Edmonton, July 8, 2021. Photo by File Photo /Postmedia
A recent trip to the University of Alberta Hospital made it clear to me much more space is needed for hospital beds and that the province’s decision to cut funding for a hospital on the south side was mistaken.
I received excellent care from doctors, nurses — true angels in Edmonton — and all the supporting cast: food services, custodial staff, laundry, for an internal bleeding ulcer. But I could not believe the number of patients in the hallways. I was fortunate to have a bed in a room with three patients that was clearly originally meant for only two. The poor nurses were tripping over themselves; IV poles could hardly pass by one another; trays were being knocked off tables and sadly, some patients were being treated in the hallways on beds but, in some cases, armchairs.
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The government should reconsider giving these amazing health-care workers and Alberta patients the space we all need.
Tom Nakashima, Edmonton
Councillor right to attend fundraiser
Re. “Some city councillors question Hamilton’s role in UCP event,” March 21
I was rather startled by Lauren Boothby’s review of concerns regarding Edmonton Coun. Sarah Hamilton’s participation in a recent UCP-sponsored event. It appears that Ms. Boothby did not attend and relied only on input from those who similarly were not present. They all should have known better.
The Politics and Prosecco event was a fundraiser and, more importantly, an awareness-raiser to help young women understand how participation in all levels of Alberta politics produces pathways to political success. Four women, including Premier Smith, spoke to how their individual journeys produced eventual success. It was an inspiring event that should be lauded, not attacked, because one participant could have appeared at some other event.
Minister Rebecca Schulz deserves full marks for this effort and results, the few dollars raised being insignificant compared with the enthusiasm generated among young Alberta women.
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Earle Snider, Edmonton
Promoting patient-blaming MLA scary
Re. “Rural MLA, former nurse tapped to aid LaGrange,” March 22
Hello, I’m from the government and I am not here to help. Proof of the comfort level of the UCP with this is the recent promotion of their MLA Chelsae Petrovic, who is infamous for stating that people with heart failure should take responsibility for their own problems.
The promotion: to assist the minister of Health with the provincial restructuring of the health-care system. Scary times.
Glenn Walmsley, St. Albert
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