The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority (WRHA; French: Office régional de la santé de Winnipeg, ORSW) is the governing body for healthcare regulation for the City of Winnipeg, the northern community of Churchill, and the Rural Municipalities of East and West St. Paul, in the Canadian province of Manitoba. The WRHA also provides health-care support and specialty referral services to those Manitobans who live out of these boundaries, as well as residents of northwestern Ontario and Nunavut.[1]
The Winnipeg health region is divided into 12 community areas for the purpose of aiding the delivery of health services.[1] Operating or funding more than 200 health service facilities and programs, the WRHA is the largest of the five regional health authorities (RHAs) in Manitoba.[1] More particularly, the WRHA consists of 35 personal care homes, 12 community health agencies, 20 community health offices, 2 tertiary hospitals, 4 community hospitals, and 4 long-term care centres.[2]
As of 2009, the WRHA also publishes a bi-monthly health and wellness magazine, called Wave. Beginning publication in 2009, Wave moved to being an online-only magazine in 2017. Brian Cole was the editor of the magazine at the time.[4]
Communities and demographics
The WRHA serves the city of Winnipeg, the northern community of Churchill, and the Rural Municipalities of East and West St. Paul; and also provide health-care support and specialty referral services to those Manitobans who live out of these boundaries, as well as residents of northwestern Ontario and Nunavut.[1]
The Winnipeg health region, which includes 230 neighborhoods and over 1,000 census dissemination areas, is subdivided into 12 community areas for the purpose of aiding the delivery of health services.[1][5]
Aboriginal people make up 11.0% of the region's residents in private households (4.5% First Nations, 0.1% Inuit, and 6.3% Métis). Moreover, 1 in 5 residents of the region are immigrants and 1 in 5 residents are visible minorities.[5]
Many medical services and procedures are only available in Winnipeg hospitals. In 2011/12, 57% of residents of Churchill travelled to Winnipeg for hospitalizations and 5% went to hospitals in other RHAs or other provinces. The WRHA found that around one third of patients in Winnipeg hospitals arrive from other RHAs in the province or from another province (due to hospital catchment).[5]: 55
Administration
Established in December 1999, the WRHA is composed of health-care providers and management professionals who coordinate, manage, deliver, allocate funds to and evaluate health care and health promotion in Winnipeg. It receives funding from the Government of Manitoba each year to pay for the delivery of health service, and reports through a Board of Directors directly to the Minister of Health, both equally accountable to the public.[1]
Among the first 10 employees to work at the WRHA when it was created in 1997, Réal Cloutier became WRHA CEO around 2017 and became president in October 2018 after holding an interim role for the position for the 16 months prior. On 10 January 2020, Cloutier officially retired as the WRHA's President and CEO.[6] The current WRHA Chief Medical Officer, Dr Joss Reimer took the position on April 18, 2022. In 2021, WRHA's board of directors chair, Wayne McWhirter, stepped down after reportedly travelling to the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic.[7]
In the 2019/20 fiscal year, the WRHA spent a total of CA$57.41 million to fund 13 community health agencies,[8] 12 of which belonging to the Manitoba Association of Community Health (MACH).[2] Also in that year, the WRHA funded a total of $14.5 million to 74 additional agencies, which delivered services in the program areas of: cardiac rehabilitation, community development, home care, housing support services, mental health, primary care, disabilities services, senior centres, and other senior support services.[8]: 3
Specialty services provided include pre- and post-natal care, HIV treatment, crisis intervention, occupational therapy, rehabilitation services, diabetes education and sexuality education.[8]
The Pan Am Clinic is an operating division of the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, with a focus on sports medicine.[21]
The Clinic was established in 1979 as a private health facility for athletes and sports-related injuries. It became a division of the WRHA in 2001. As of 2014, the facility includes bone and joint care and research, computer radiography, MRI, orthopaedic operations, plastic surgery services, a minor injury clinic for children, a research/education lab as well as a specialized concussion clinic at a satellite location, at the Bell MTS Iceplex.[21]
Other centres
The Manitoba Adolescent Treatment Centre (MATC) provides mental health services for child and adolescent who experience psychiatric and/or emotional disorders. MATC opened as an independent psychiatric facility on 2 October 1984. It became part of the WRHA in 2000.[17]
The Rehabilitation Centre for Children (RCC) provides rehabilitation services for children and youth with physical and developmental challenges in Manitoba and surrounding areas (including Nunavut and Northwestern Ontario). Along with the WRHA, the RCC receives funding from Manitoba Health, the Department of Families, various school divisions in Manitoba, and the Children's Rehabilitation Foundation.[18]
Churchill Regional Health Authority
In 2012, the provincial government merged the provinces eleven Regional Health Authorities into five. As part of this reorganization, the Churchill Regional Health Authority—which oversees health care for the town of Churchill, Manitoba and communities in the Kivalliq Region of Nunavut—was merged with the WRHA. The Churchill Region now operates as a division of the WRHA.[22]
^St. Amant is a not-for-profit organization for Manitobans with developmental disabilities and autism. Among other things, the Centre includes the St. Amant Research Centre, the St. Amant School, and River Road Child Care.
References
^ abcdefghi"About". Winnipeg Regional Health Authority. Retrieved 2021-02-03.