Toronto Star

Surgery backlogs near breaking point

Immediate government help needed to address strained health system

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI THE CANADIAN PRESS

Ongoing surgical and diagnostic backlogs will only worsen without immediate government help to address a strained health-care system, says the Canadian Medical Associatio­n, which found average wait times increased by one-to-two months for the most common procedures in the first wave. The CMA said Monday it would take $1.3 billion in additional funds to tackle delays sidelined from January to June because they were deemed non-essential during the pandemic.

Astudy ordered by the organizati­on looked at the six most commonly delayed procedures: CT and MRI scans, hip and knee replacemen­ts, cataract surgeries and coronary artery bypass grafts, which all plummeted in April, when almost no cataract or knee replacemen­ts took place.

Although procedures gradually began to rebound in June, the report found more than 270,000 people had their MRI scans — which can detect serious disease or injury — delayed by a national average of nearly eight months, more than seven weeks longer than before the pandemic. Those waiting for knee replacemen­t surgeries had to wait an average of 14 months, about two months longer than before the pandemic.

“The impact on wait times is just going to be the worst-ever in our system,” CMA president Dr. Ann Collins said as she called on the federal and provincial government­s to develop a plan to restore backlogs to pre-pandemic levels in one year.

“It’s going to have serious consequenc­es the longer this pandemic goes on.”

Almost half of the delayed procedures were CT scans, while about a third were MRI scans, which are often used to diagnose potential cancers, followup on cancer treatment and screen for breast cancer as well as diagnose joint pain.

The rise in CT scan backlogs varied wildly across the country, from a 14 per cent increase in Alberta to a 75 per cent increase in Ontario.

Ontario also saw the biggest delays in MRI scans and still had the most ground to cover in June when many parts of the country began resuming health services.

Nationally, the backlog included 249,088 CT scans with a 3.5 month-long wait, which was 33 days longer than before the pandemic.

While Collins said she believes every effort has been made to triage patients, it’s very possible that an “unfortunat­e unintended consequenc­e” could be untold numbers of missed cancers, diseases and declining health that would eventually demand more complex care than if they had been caught earlier.

Even designatin­g some procedures like hip replacemen­ts “non-essential” is a misnomer, said Collins.

“To the patient who’s having great difficulty walking, who can no longer go up the steps in their home, that is a critical procedure,” she says, noting delayed care could also limit ability to work, increase reliance on caregivers and pain killers and strain families emotionall­y and financiall­y.

All non-essential surgeries were halted early in the pandemic to limit the spread of COVID-19 and ensure hospitals had the capacity to respond to a possible surge in infections.

But any one of the delayed procedures could become urgent over time, especially as the second wave further delays care for people who may have been waiting since before the pandemic, said Collins.

And that could lead to more strain on hospitals by requiring bigger surgeries and longer recovery times, not to mention additional pressures on other health-care workers including home care staff and physiother­apists, said Collins.

“If a patient’s presenting later in their disease process, they almost certainly will require more resources treatmentw­ise and care-wise in general,” said Collins.

The study found the six procedures plummeted to their lowest point in April and began a rebound in May in June as services gradually returned, however, a sizable backlog remained. It did not take into account the current second wave engulfing some hospitals.

The study estimates that an additional 307,498 procedures would need to be performed over a 12-month period to clear the backlog — a 6.1 per cent increase compared to what would have been expected over the course of a year.

Of the six backlogged procedures studied in June, the increased wait was greatest for cataract patients who waited an additional 75 days for surgery, for a total average of331 days.

Collins said she didn’t expect the health-care system to rebound fully for at least a year, noting the numbers don’t include data on all of the halted procedures, nor those procedures or screenings that might have resulted from patients who cancelled their doctor’s appointmen­t over COVID-19 fears.

The CMA said the suggested investment is a conservati­ve estimate that doesn’t include increased costs in personal protective equipment, additional cleaning measures and any new policy guidelines that would further reduce capacity. HealthCare­CAN president Paul-Emile Cloutier said the study only presents a snapshot of time during those first months of the pandemic and doesn’t fully forecast the pressures he expects will mount.

His fear is that “at one point, the system will crack.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? More than 270,000 people had their MRI scans delayed by a national average of nearly eight months, more than seven weeks longer than before the pandemic.
DREAMSTIME More than 270,000 people had their MRI scans delayed by a national average of nearly eight months, more than seven weeks longer than before the pandemic.

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