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Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

First Drumheller hospital opened 100 years ago

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    In July 1920, a celebration lasting two days was held in the valley for the opening of the Drumheller Municipal Hospital. The event included a luncheon, a grand opening, and a grand dance at the Napier Ballroom.
    This was the culmination of years of hard work, and one of the visionaries for the hospital was a humble farmer from the Pope Lease area who saw the need during the 1918 pandemic.
    Linda Adams, who was a nurse at the Drumheller Health Centre brought the Mail the story of her grandfather George  Webber. Her mother Mary Jane Coulbourn had recounted his story in the Memories-Yours and Mine, history book published by the Hesketh-Pope Lease Historical Committee.
    In the fall of 1918, the pandemic known as the Spanish Flu began to surge in the local community. George Webber had bought a 490 Chevrolet touring car and put it to use serving the area. His wife Bessie would spend days preparing food suitable for people who were ill. Each morning Webber would load up the car with the meals, as well as ample Aspirin and whisky by the case. He would visit homes in the area protected only by a cheesecloth mask doused in eucalyptus oil, deliver the food, and his brand of “medicine” to the family and many bachelors.
    She notes that “some of the patients, because of personal convictions, were a bit reluctant to partake in his whisky potions, but they usually yielded to persuasion, and as I remembered, all recovered.”
    Coulbourn also recalls him often saying “When this epidemic is over, I’m going to work to get a hospital.”

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    In late October George was struck by the flu pandemic, however using his own brand of medicine, he was back up and about the house.
    “The very first day he was able to be out of the house was a very vivid memory to me… In a matter of minutes, Haymond’s (neighbour) car coming from Drumheller drove by on the road with flags and horn blowing. Dad explained the War was
over and Armistice had been signed,” Coulbourn writes.
    It was not long after Webber got down to business working to build a hospital in Drumheller.
    This took many trips to Edmonton and work to persuade residents and provincial officials of the need for a hospital. A board was formed and he was elected as one of the members.
    In September of 1917 proponents were able to persuade the government any hospital built in the area should be located in Drumheller, in close proximity to the mines. At a meeting on January  8, 1919, Webber was elected chairman and Harold Brown was appointed secretary-treasurer. The board recommended the land immediately east of K. Miller’s residence in Parkdale, owned by Mr. Gaudet Audy, be the site of the hospital. An architect was appointed and they sought approval for the design from the Provincial Department of Health. In February the local unions passed a resolution to support the hospital. In June 1919 they entered into the construction contracts, with the project coming to $62,077.
    The construction was complete and the grand opening was held on July 15, 1920.
    The hospital went through many changes over the years including the addition of various wings, renovations, and expansions.
    In 1963, authority was given to renovate a wing built in 1956, however, the estimated cost exceeded the cost of new construction. In 1970 a new hospital was built on the site.
    This served as the primary health facility in the valley until 2002 when Drumheller Health Centre (DHC) relocated to the current site, and a bigger and more modern facility was built all on one floor. Along with this new location came new services including a CT scan, to complement other modern and needed diagnostic equipment.
    “We can provide treatment to more complex patients than we have in the past as our expertise increases. At the same time, as part of Alberta Health Services’ Central Zone, our site is one in a strong system of healthcare facilities that benefit from the expertise and capabilities of others. In Drumheller’s case, the site’s proximity to Red Deer and Calgary allows health professionals and patients to benefit from clinical specialties available there,’ said site leader Nathan Banda.
    The hospital also houses the Drumheller Community Cancer Centre, which allows residents to get many of the treatments they need close to home.
    Support for the Drumheller Health Centre has been strong over the years.

    “Our donor community, led by the Drumheller Area Health Foundation, has played a vital role in supporting healthcare services, especially in palliative care, labour and delivery, long-term care, and the operating room. We are also blessed to have a growing, collaborative relationship with the Town Of Drumheller. We are incredibly grateful for the support of our community,” he said.
    “As we celebrate the centenary of the Drumheller Health Centre, we thank our physicians, staff, and volunteers for making this facility successful.  Over the years, we have benefited from dedicated and expert teams who are committed to the site and their community. They are the heart of DHC.”
    As for Adams, she graduated from nursing in 1965 and worked at the Drumheller hospital from 1967 to 1969, and continued her career later at the new Health Centre.
    My mother was so proud of me for coming home to work in my Grandfather’s hospital. It was so important to her and said my grandpa would be so proud.” 


Provincial investment supports municipal infrastructure

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    A billion-dollar investment by the Government of Alberta will aid municipalities in creating new jobs and coping with the financial strain of the COVID-19 pandemic.
    On Tuesday, July 28 a news release stated municipalities would be provided additional funding for shovel-ready infrastructure projects. The stimulus would help Albertans get back to work while also supporting additional operating expenses incurred by municipalities during the pandemic.
    Mayor Heather Colberg told the Mail, “We were excited to hear about this funding program as it is a great chance to make improvements to our community.”
    The investment will help provide funding for a number of projects identified in the town’s 2020 capital budget.
    “If we wish Drumheller to grow and prosper, it is vital we work at improving infrastructure and services in our community,” Mayor Colberg said. She added the grant will help the town support development within the community and make Drumheller more desirable, which will contribute in helping local companies.
    Mayor Colberg says the town is “thrilled at the support” Drumheller-Stettler MLA Nate Horner has offered since his election and will “definitely be in touch” as any projects develop through the investment.
    Horner told the Mail, “I’m hopeful every municipality will get a piece (of the investment) to help stimulate their local economy.”
    He added municipalities were eager to put shovel ready projects forward.
    Budgets for many municipalities faced adjustments ahead of the COVID-19 pandemic, forcing delays on many projects. Earlier in the pandemic the Alberta government called upon municipalities to prepare projects in anticipation of stimulus funding.
    Drumheller will not be the only local municipality to benefit from the investment.
    Village of Standard Mayor Joe Pederson told the Mail, “We had plans for projects this year which had to be put on hold due to the economy.”
    The village’s centennial year is approaching in 2022 and Mayor Pederson said the village hoped to complete road work and underground improvements to water and sanitary sewer lines.
    He added they would “wait and see before going ahead this year” but said the project may not see completion before 2021.
    The billion-dollar investment into municipalities in Alberta could help produce new jobs and provide substantial relief to municipalities facing financial hardship due to redesignation of monies during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dear COVID-19

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I’m nervous about the return to school plans. I understand the thought of sending them back to get parents back to work and help revive the economy. But I’m worried about how this will all play out.

I’ve read every government and school district document provided to the public and it still isn’t clear to me. Here are some of my questions and concerns:

  • if a child has known allergies, they should get at least one negative CoVID test before starting school. This is intended as a determination of the child’s baseline health status for the school. What if their allergies are particularly bad one day and they have symptoms beyond the baseline? Do they get tested again?
  • At our clinic, we sanitize every room before and after every patient encounter. It’s been a lot of work for our staff, but essential to protect them and our patients. Who will clean the high touch surfaces multiple times per day? Will teachers be the ones sanitizing? If so, won’t that take away from them teaching?
  • How will teachers with kids manage if one of their kids has symptoms? They’ll be off work and we’ll have a substitute. Won’t that take away from the student experience as it is likely to happen several times during the year? Won’t bringing substitute teachers in broaden the sphere of possible exposure?
  • Will school buses have only one student per seat? Will those be sanitized as well?
  • If my child who notoriously has a runny nose in the winter has “symptoms,” do we all have to self-isolate? Do we all get tested? And if we are negative, can she go back or only once her runny nose resolves? Because I might as well take the winter off then.
  • What if numbers keep rising? Will we then shutdown the schools again and we’ll all be scrambling to find child care, etc?
  • Won’t this add to student, teacher and parental anxiety and further impact everyone’s mental health?

These are a handful of my worries as I watch my little ones sleep peacefully in their beds. I know many of us are at wit's end with homeschooling, but what a challenge this will be for our teachers. When my kids ask me questions about going back, I fear I don’t have clear answers. And I’m a doctor well versed in all the information out there. I hate feeling unsure of the plan. I don’t trust self-monitoring of symptoms - we all know parents send their kids to school with colds all the time. How can it really be different during CoVID?

Dear COVID is a weekly column supplied by Drs. Rithesh and Veronique Ram.


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