B.C. makes staff and system changes to improve ambulance response times
The B.C. government is boosting resources for the province’s ambulance system in an effort to improve response times, and to improve working conditions for paramedics and dispatchers.
Health minister Adrian Dix said the province is providing funding for 85 new full-time paramedics, 30 full-time dispatchers, and 22 new ambulances; while also converting 22 rural ambulance stations to 24/7 ALPHA stations to enhance ambulance coverage for these communities. Six are scheduled to be running by October 2021 and there are plans for up to an additional 16 stations to be ready by October 2021.
To get paramedics and ambulances back on the road to respond to patient calls more quickly, the province is directing health authorities to add additional staff to receive patients and care for them when they arrive at emergency departments.
Dix said the province is strengthening the ambulance system to ensure it is faster and more responsive, a better place to work for paramedics and dispatchers, and able to rapidly meet changing demands and needs through focused and direct leadership.











