Ontario Connecting People to Faster Emergency Care

HASTINGS — The Ontario government is investing over $910 million to increase the availability of ambulances across the province and connect people and families to emergency care faster and closer to home.

“When someone experiences an emergency, it is vital that they receive the care they need as quickly as possible,” said Sylvia Jones, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health. “By strengthening all aspects of the health care system and ensuring faster access to emergency care, our government is providing paramedics and emergency departments with the tools they need as we connect more people across the province to high-quality care, when they need it most.”elderly care, senior care, care homes Canada, retirement homes, assisted living, senior living, nursing homes, elder support services, long-term care facilities, senior housing, retirement communities, in-home care, home healthcare, home care services, senior homecare, elderly care at home, home nursing, personal care services, home health aides, caregiver services, Canadian provinces, Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, Northwest Territories, Yukon, Nunavut,

Ontario is increasing land ambulance funding to municipalities by an average of eight per cent, bringing the province’s total investment to over $877 million this year, including over $10.7 million in Land Ambulance Services Grant funding for Hastings County. This increase in base funding will help municipalities address increased costs so they can continue to deliver high-quality emergency care.

To further reduce delays paramedics encounter when dropping patients off at a hospital, Ontario is also investing over $33 million through the Dedicated Offload Nurses Program to help hospitals hire more nurses and other eligible health professionals that are dedicated to offloading ambulance patients in hospital emergency departments.

This program allows paramedics to get back out into the community faster and respond to their next 9-1-1 call sooner and has played a significant role in reducing ambulance offload times and increasing ambulance availability for 9-1-1 patients across the province. As a result of this investment, provincial ambulance offload time has been reduced by more than 50 per cent since its peak in October 2022.

To ensure people receive urgent critical care sooner, Ontario is continuing to implement the Medical Priority Dispatch System (MPDS) across the province. The system helps prioritize and triage emergency medical calls to 9-1-1 so that paramedics can be dispatched sooner. Over the last year, the province has rolled out the system to Mississauga, Kenora, Thunder Bay, Ottawa and Renfrew. The province is now accelerating the system’s implementation at the 15 remaining dispatch sites across Ontario by May 2027, over a year ahead of schedule.

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