Nova Scotia

Victoria General not at '100 per cent' six weeks after flood

The central Halifax hospital is still short beds and has units split between floors due to flood damage, said Victoria Sullivan, the health authority' central zone operations director.

The intensive care unit is split and the hospital is still short in-patient beds, the health authority says

Health authority operations director Victoria Sullivan says it's been challenging to work with the damage at the Victoria General hospital. (CBC)

The Victoria General Hospital in Halifax is not running at full capacity, despite what the Nova Scotia health minister might say, the health authority said Friday. 

Heather Minister Leo Glavine said Thursday the hospital was "just about back 100 per cent" on service requirements and beds. 

"We're not back at 100 per cent. We are at reduced bed capacity. People are working at different locations," said Victoria Sullivan, the head of operations for the Nova Scotia Health Authority's central zone.

"The level of service that we can provide is different," she said.

A pipe burst in September, flooding floors in the Centennial Building of the central Halifax hospital. More than 100 surgeries were cancelled and three floors had extensive damage. 

Swaths of the hospital are still unusable, so staff are split up among temporary facilities. 

While the hospital is running all of its services, it's doing so in a more challenging manner because of the damaged facility, Sullivan said. 

The VG hospital in Halifax has been experiencing problems for years. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

"It's not a long term plan and it's not sustainable," Sullivan said. 

The intensive care unit, for example, is split between two sections not meant to house an ICU, she said. 

"There's limitations in terms of the number of beds that we have. We're down 11 beds in total for in-patient, down ICU capacity," Sullivan said. 

'Not at full steam ahead'

That's still better than directly following the flood, which saw the hospital lose 34 beds total from in-patient care. she said. Staff and physicians have found it challenging but are working hard, she added.

Hospital authorities worried two floors of the Victoria General wouldn't open again after the flood in September. (Brett Ruskin/CBC)

"We're not at full steam ahead," Sullivan said. "It's difficult. It is impacting what we can do. It's impacting flow."

Sullivan said remediation efforts should be finished by the end of December. 

The health minister is expected to announce a major update about the Victoria General in the coming weeks.

Sullivan said she's not privy to the contents of the announcement, but knows there have been discussions about replacing the hospital, which is "at the end of its life."