Times Colonist

Wait times for health specialist­s up: report

- LAURA KANE

VANCOUVER — A new study says Canadians are waiting longer than ever for specialist treatment, but one health research organizati­on says most patients are receiving key procedures within acceptable time frames.

The Fraser Institute released its annual report Thursday on queues for specialist visits and diagnostic and surgical procedures.

It is based on surveys of about 2,400 physicians from 12 specialtie­s, including orthopedic surgery and radiation oncology.

The study says the median national wait time, from referral to treatment, is 21.2 weeks, up from 20 weeks last year. It says this year’s wait time is more than double that of 1993, when it was 9.3 weeks.

“I think it matters to those Canadians who are in pain, who are relying on their families and caregivers while they’re waiting for treatment,” author Bacchus Barua said.

The study finds Ontario has the shortest total wait at 15.4 weeks, while New Brunswick has the longest at 41.7 weeks. The waits in British Columbia and Alberta are both just over 26 weeks.

It also says patients wait more than 41 weeks for orthopedic surgery, while the wait for medical oncology is just over three weeks. Canadians wait more than four weeks for a CT scan and nearly 11 weeks for a MRI scan, it adds.

The Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n also reports annually on wait times. Its latest study found that three out of four patients have priority procedures done within national benchmarks.

The institute uses provincial and territoria­l data and focuses on priority areas set out by the 2004 Health Accord.

The benchmarks also set by the accord are considered to be medically acceptable wait times.

Between 2012 and 2016, wait times for hip and knee replacemen­ts remained relatively stable, while they increased for cataract removal and decreased for hip fracture repair, the report says.

Overall last year, 90 per cent of patients waited 36.4 weeks for treatment, it says.

The Fraser Institute sent surveys to more than 11,800 specialist physicians and received responses from 21 per cent.

B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix said only 343 specialist­s in the province responded. There are about 5,900 specialist­s in B.C., so the Fraser Institute didn’t hear from 94 per cent of them, he said.

However, Dix said wait times worsened over the past five to seven years under the previous B.C. government and he is working on solutions with doctors and health authoritie­s.

Health Canada spokeswoma­n Tammy Jarbeau said Canada continues to perform well on median wait times for priority procedures compared with other Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t countries.

However, surgical demand continues to increase and jurisdicti­ons will be challenged to meet benchmarks, Jarbeau said.

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