Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Urgent and primary care centre set to open in Duncan next year

Construction of the 10,000-square-foot facility at 940 Government St. is underway
web1_07042024-vtc-news-upcc
B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix. DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST

A new $7-million urgent and ­primary care centre is expected to open in downtown Duncan next year, Health Minister Adrian Dix announced Wednesday.

Construction of the 10,000-square-foot Cowichan UPCC at 940 Government St. is underway. The $7-million cost includes medical equipment, clinic furnishings and technology.

UPCCs are intended for people who do not have a doctor or nurse practitioner or can’t access their provider and need care within 12 to 24 hours, but don’t require the services of a hospital ER — such as those with sprains, cuts, high fevers and minor infections.

Cowichan’s UPCC will also offer primary-care services for patients attached to the ­facility.

Once fully staffed, the UPCC is expected to have ­approximately 30 full-time-equivalent staff, including family physicians, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, social workers, mental-health clinicians and clinical support staff, according to the Health Ministry.

There are seven UPCCs in the Island Health region, including facilities in Langford, North Quadra, James Bay, ­downtown Victoria, Esquimalt, Gorge Road and Nanaimo. There are 35 UPCCs in the ­province.

Amid a province-wide doctor shortage, many UPCCs face high demand, with patients complaining of lining up in early-morning hours or phoning ahead only to be waitlisted. There have also been complaints of understaffing.

Operated by Island Health, the Cowichan UPCC is a ­collaboration between Island Health, the Ministry of Health, Cowichan Primary Care Network, Indigenous communities and organizations, and the Cowichan Division of Family Practice.

Dr. Carole Williams, co-chair of the Cowichan Division of Family Practice, said it was a collective decision to implement a UPCC in Cowichan and continued collaboration will be “critical” going forward.

“This is a facility designed to align with existing services and help to meet the growing need for primary care,” Williams said in a statement.

[email protected]