Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. patients waiting too long for surgery: doctor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Mar, 2022 04:45 PM
  • B.C. patients waiting too long for surgery: doctor

VANCOUVER - The incoming leader of a group that represents surgeons across British Columbia is questioning the health minister's claims that nearly all surgeries that were cancelled in the first and later waves of the pandemic have been completed.

Dr. Cassandra Lane Dielwart, president-elect of the British Columbia Orthopaedic Association, said the province did not account for many patients who have suffered without "life-transforming" procedures that weren't even booked, forcing some to become addicted to painkillers.

Health Minister Adrian Dix told a recent news conference that 99.8 per cent of patients whose surgery was postponed in the first wave of the pandemic have had it, and that's the case for 94.2 per cent of those who did not get their procedure in the second and third waves.

About 15,000 surgeries in all categories were initially cancelled but most of them have now been done, Dix said in an interview Tuesday. Many were urgent procedures for cancer and heart patients, but those needing orthopedic surgeries like hip or knee replacements also had them, he said.

However, catching up on postponed surgeries has delayed others, leaving the province with a "significant hill to climb," he said.

"Reducing surgical wait times is a priority. And that's why I think B.C. has responded more vigorously, more dynamically, to the impacts of COVID-19. One, we built up the system to do it, and two, we took real action in May of 2020 to immediately start addressing what was going to be a significant backlog."

Dielwart, whose association speaks for about 170 surgeons, said she and other doctors have been getting fewer operating-room days due to a shortage of staff like nurses, so patients are not getting booked for surgeries.

That means they're not being counted on any list of cancelled procedures, she said.

Dix's claims that nearly all cancelled surgeries were completed did not fit the reality of an estimated 10,000 people waiting for surgery, many from the first wave of the pandemic, she said.

"With the stories coming in from around the province, there has not been a single surgeon whose wait-list has gone down. I have not spoken to anybody where their wait-list has stayed the same. It's incrementally increased."

The province needs to come up with standardized data to count unbooked procedures so there's a more realistic picture of how many people are waiting for surgery, Dielwart said.

She said orthopedic patients in British Columbia aren't considered a priority compared with heart and cancer surgeries, adding those showed a net reduction in wait times.

"That's a success story for those guys, but unfortunately for the orthopedic side is our patients who are suffering."

Many people have missed out on procedures that would have greatly improved their quality of life before they lost more mobility, she said.

Dielwart said she asked for an urgent meeting with Dix in a letter sent to his ministry on March 16 but has not had a response about working with the province and health authorities to ensure appropriate access to surgery for patients.

She said one surgeon in Prince George had a wait-list that averaged about 80 to 90 people for about five years before the pandemic. Now he has 271 people waiting for their turn in the operating room.

About 1,500 orthopedic patients are on wait-lists in Kamloops, while 1,200 people need surgery in Kelowna, with half of them now waiting over a year, Dielwart said.

Wait times for orthopedic surgery in Kelowna — where she performs orthopedic trauma surgery and joint replacements — were down to four to six months before the pandemic, she said.

The Health Ministry did not immediately respond to a question about whether it has a timeline for catching up with orthopedic surgeries that have yet to be completed.

Some patients start their visits to an orthopedic surgeon using a cane and taking Tylenol for pain, which often becomes less manageable without stronger medication, Dielwart said.

"A couple of months go by and all of a sudden they're using a walker and then they're in a wheelchair and then they can't actually get through their day, so they have to go on Tylenol 3s and then Tylenol 3s don't cut it so now they need oxycodone.

"Pain affects every second of their day. You wake up in pain, you think about how you're going to get to the kitchen to make breakfast," she said, adding some people fall into a deep depression.

Others have progressed to using a fentanyl patch after 17 months of waiting for surgery, Dielwart said.

Figures from the Canadian Institute for Health Information show that in the first wave of the pandemic, about half of Canadians who received a joint replacement did not get their surgery within recommended time frames, compared with around one-third in 2019.

MORE National ARTICLES

VPD releases surveillance images of homicide victim

VPD releases surveillance images of homicide victim
On December 10 at around 11 a.m., Vancouver Police were called after Justis was found deceased inside his home near West 3rd Avenue and MacDonald Street. Police believe he was killed the day prior.

VPD releases surveillance images of homicide victim

B.C. city apologizes to homeowner for tax sale

B.C. city apologizes to homeowner for tax sale
The city called a special council meeting Tuesday to discuss the recommendations that were made last week in a report from the provincial ombudsperson.

B.C. city apologizes to homeowner for tax sale

Federal government pegs $5 billion for B.C. floods

Federal government pegs $5 billion for B.C. floods
British Columbia's finance minister says the federal government's $5 billion contribution to flood disaster recovery efforts in the province is a historic amount of cash that reflects the extreme nature of the disaster.

Federal government pegs $5 billion for B.C. floods

B.C. checking to ensure accurate vaccine records

B.C. checking to ensure accurate vaccine records
British Columbia health officials say COVID-19 immunization records entered into the provincial immunization registry that are suspected to be fraudulent are being reported to law enforcement.

B.C. checking to ensure accurate vaccine records

Metro Vancouver got more than a dusting of snow on Tuesday

Metro Vancouver got more than a dusting of snow on Tuesday
Winter weather is made its way back into southern B.C. with Environment Canada issuing heavy snowfall warnings for several areas. Snow fell right across Metro Vancouver for a good chunk of the day Tuesday, bringing up to 20 centimetres of snow in some areas.

Metro Vancouver got more than a dusting of snow on Tuesday

Omicron prompts reduction of Liberal MPs in House

Omicron prompts reduction of Liberal MPs in House
The federal government is vastly reducing the number of Liberal MPs present in the House of Commons due to the lightning spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19. In addition, government House leader Mark Holland says all regional and national Liberal caucus meetings Wednesday will be entirely virtual.

Omicron prompts reduction of Liberal MPs in House