Alberta emergency rooms hit with wave of influenza patients
AHS says extra beds added as hospitals face high demand around the province.

Alberta Children’s Hospital is dealing with a wave of children sick with influenza. Alberta Health Services says hospitals around the province are facing high patient volumes in emergency rooms and on inpatient units. Ose Irete CBC
Jennifer Lee, CBC News Calgary Dec 10, 2025
Alberta hospitals are being slammed with flu patients at a time when they’re already under strain, and doctors are bracing for more as the worst of the respiratory virus season has yet to hit.
“We’re getting crushed — everywhere. All of the emergency departments are getting hit very hard,” said Dr. Paul Parks, the president-elect of the section of emergency medication with the Alberta Medical Association.
“This is only the beginning of it.”
Experts have been warning this could be a particularly bad influenza season.
The province’s respiratory virus dashboard shows hospitalizations are rising and, at 17.8 per cent, the flu positivity rate is higher than average for this time of year.
“It’s placing immense pressure on our hospital system,” said Parks.
As of Nov. 29, 519 Albertans had been hospitalized due to influenza. There had been 31 intensive care unit admissions and 15 deaths.
| WATCH | Doctors urge people to get vaccinated |
| Alberta is reporting its first death from influenza this season, and as CBC’s Jo Horwood reports, experts are warning that an evolving strain could be mismatched to the vaccine. CBC November 10 |
“Across the province, Alberta Health Services (AHS) facilities are seeing increased levels of patient demand. This includes high volumes of patients presenting at emergency departments (ED) and patients requiring hospitalization,” an AHS spokesperson said in an emailed statement.
“Among those patients are many seeking care due to respiratory illnesses.”
At Alberta Children’s Hospital in Calgary, Dr. Sidd Thakore is seeing kids of all ages sick with the flu.
“Definitely the last few days we’ve seen those numbers go up quite substantially.”
According to Thakore, they added extra staff, including more physicians, early on and are double-bunking patients in rooms designed for one child.
“Our doubled rooms are being filled up with patients, and we are being asked to discharge patients as quickly as we can. We’re starting to see some of those pressures come in now.”
RSV cases are starting to show up now too, he said.
AHS said it is working to address the demand by enacting its over-capacity and surge plans.
“These plans include using dedicated surge and over-capacity beds on inpatient units, discharging appropriate patients early with enhanced home supports, augmenting staffing, managing surgery patients at home instead of in hospital bed as appropriate, and working … to return patients who no longer need specialized care to other health facilities when medically appropriate,” read a statement from AHS.
AHS also said it added 336 temporary beds during the 2024-25 respiratory virus season, including inpatient beds and emergency department spaces.
This year, 206 of those have been put into operation year-round. They are all in use. The remaining 130 are to be used temporarily during the respiratory virus season. All but seven of those have been opened.
“We continue to open spaces as staffing and resources allow,” AHS said.
| Hospital capacity troubles |
According to Parks, the surge is particularly concerning because it comes at a time when hospitals are already stretched to their limits due to a variety of factors, including population growth, the government’s ongoing health system restructuring and low vaccination rates.
“All 16 of our major, big hospitals are all over-capacity,” said Parks, who is an ER physician in Medicine Hat.
“I just can’t stress enough — it is very difficult. We’re going into our highest volume seasons and every single one of our [major] emergency departments are holding admitted inpatients that can’t be admitted into the hospital because there’s no beds.”
Parks said he’s also seeing an increase in COVID-19 cases in hospital.
We’re reaping what the government sowed.
– Dr. Paul Parks, Alberta Medical Association
Patients with respiratory viruses end up in beds that are also needed by surgery patients or those needing cancer treatment, for example, which can lead to delays in other care, he noted.
Parks blames the provincial government for what he describes as a “failure” to promote public health and vaccination.
| Immunization rates down |
Immunization rates for influenza and COVID have been dropping in recent years, and the provincial government has been widely criticized by doctors and scientists for its decision to charge many Albertans for the COVID shot this year.
The fall immunization campaign was confusing for many people who struggled to get appointments early on.
And the province remains without a permanent chief medical officer of health who, in the past, would often speak publicly about communicable diseases and promote vaccination.
Provincial data shows 16.2 per cent of Albertans have had a flu shot, and 6.1 per cent have had a COVID-19 shot so far this season.
“We’re reaping what the government sowed,” said Parks.
CBC News reached out to the Ministry of Primary and Preventative Health Services and the Ministry of Hospital and Surgical Health Services for a response. Hours after the story was published, the press secretary to Primary and Preventative Health Minister Adriana LaGrange sent an emailed statement to CBC News.
“We are seeing an increase in respiratory viruses and overall hospital occupancy, as we do every winter. There have been no capacity-driven cancellations of surgery or other services, apart from a few isolated cases,” Maddison McKee wrote.
“The claim that all the large hospitals have recently been operating at over 100 per cent occupancy is false. The largest hospitals routinely run at over 100 per cent capacity at some times through the winter. The system overall is well within the levels that are typical at the peak of flu season in recent years.”
McKee said flu and RSV are rising at similar rates to the previous three years, and COVID rates are a “fraction” of what they were during the same years.
The ministry also refutes that there is any connection between respiratory virus admissions and government policy, calling it “wilful distortion.”
“As of last week, we had provided 96 per cent of the number of flu shots administered in the prior year at the same time,” said McKee, adding vaccine uptake has dropped in Alberta and other jurisdictions since the pandemic.
The government asserts any further drop in vaccination rates could be related to concerns that there may be a mismatch between the flu shot and main circulating strain.
Experts insist that vaccination continues to protect against serious illness.
| Those at higher risk |
Meanwhile, Thakore said it’s not too late to get the flu shot, and he’s urging people to stay home and away from vulnerable Albertans if they’re sick.
In addition to older Albertans, children under five are at higher risk of complications due to influenza.
Older kids, including teens with asthma, heart problems or immune deficiencies, can also end up very sick, said Thakore.
And he warned that while it’s rare, severe complications can occur from influenza, including severe brain inflammation, known as encephalitis.
| Jennifer Lee Reporter |
| Jennifer Lee is a Senior Reporter for CBC News based in Calgary. She covers health stories for CBC’s web, radio and video platforms. If you have a story to share, let her know. |
Source CBC News Calgary
Also see
Doctors urge vaccination as influenza upswing hits Alberta CBC
Alberta parents still struggling to book COVID shots for kids as doctors raise alarm about access CBC
Capacity limits at Stollery in Edmonton lead to chemotherapy delays for children CBC
80-year-old diabetic Calgarian shocked to receive $100 bill for COVID-19 vaccine CBC
Alberta’s role in Canada’s loss of measles elimination status embarrassing, former chief medical officer says CBC
Doctors urge vaccination as influenza upswing hits Alberta CBC
First flu death of the season in Alberta amid warnings about potentially tough months ahead CBC
Children’s hospitals in Canada face flood of flu visits as doctors urge families to get vaccinated CBC
Hospital overcrowding makes flu response in northern Ontario more challenging, says ER doctor CBC
CHEO reports concerning rise in flu visits CBC