Manitoba issuing letters to hip, knee patients about free out-of-province option for care - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba issuing letters to hip, knee patients about free out-of-province option for care

Hundreds of Manitobans waiting for a hip or knee replacement will be getting a letter in the mail to encourage them to consider leaving the provincefor their operation.

Awareness of out-of-province procedures not 'as widely broadcast as we would want it to be:' task force head

A number of surgeons in an operating theatre, with blue gowns and PPE on.
Manitoba patients who could get a hip or knee surgery outside the province may soon get a letter encouraging them to consider travelling to Ontario, North Dakota or Ohio. (Darryl Dyck/ The Canadian Press)

Hundreds of Manitobans waiting for a hip or knee replacement will be getting a letter in the mail encouraging them to consider leaving the provincefor their operation.

The provincial task force focused on reducingManitoba'ssurgery wait list wants to drum up interest among eligible people who are willing to travel to get their procedure more quickly. The province will coverall costs, including travel and accommodations.

Uptakefor these surgeries completedinnorthwestern Ontario, North Dakota and Ohio, under agreements the province reached earlier this yearis risingbuthas fallen short of initial estimates,the executive director of Manitoba'sdiagnostic and surgical recovery task force says.

"We want to give everybody the opportunity to consider the option, and I perhapsdon't think it's as widely broadcast as we would want it to be," Dr. DavidMatear said in a Tuesday interview.

Dr. David Matear, who heads up Manitoba's surgical and diagnostic backlog task force, is shown at an April news conference. He says he expects the number of patients travelling for procedures will increase as awareness grows. (Ian Froese/CBC)

He expects a first batch of 500 letters to be issued later this week. Up to this point, patients were either informed of the out-of-province program by their health-care provider or appliedto the programthemselves.

The task force, which is also working to build up local surgical capacity,is consulting with physicians and surgeonsto ensure the letter'swording is right, Matear said.

Patients must meet medical criteria

Not all Manitobans waiting for a hip or knee surgery willmeet the criteria. Eligible patients must be of normal weight and have noproblems with their heart, liver, kidney or blood vessels, among other conditions. They must also have at least two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Up to750 people will be eligible to gethip or knee surgerieswithin the next two years or so under the agreements the province announced in August withBig Thunder Orthopedic Associates in northwestern Ontario, Sanford Health in Fargo, N.D., and Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.

There was also a pledge to help spinal surgery patients get their operations in Fargo, but no estimate on the number of procedures was provided when that agreement was announced last January.

As of this week, 140people have left Manitoba to go under the knife for one ofthese operations.

The Sanford Medical Center in Fargo, N.D., is one of the centres the province has reached an agreement with. (Sanford Health)

While those numbers are growing, initial targets have not been reached. An August news release, for example, said 125 hip and knee surgeries could be completedin Fargo this year, althoughonly 13 operations had been done bymid-December.

Matear said gettingarrangements up and running has taken a lot of time. Each facility starts with a limited number of patients, to ensure thelogistics are handled appropriately.

"I think what we have to do is to build in the processes,build upthe partnerships, the opportunities, and then of course communicate that effectively to those people who may be eligible to take up these options out of province."

Matear said he expects the number of patients travelling forprocedures will increase as awareness grows.

He said another 140 procedures arein the queue, including 50 more people booked for spinal surgery and 47 more for hip or knee replacement surgeriesin Fargo, butthe task force has the capacity to acceptmore patients.

'Very narrow eligibility': Doctors Manitoba

Kim Kurylo, the first Manitoba patient to get surgery in Ohio, urged anyone who is healthy enoughto sign up for an out-of-province operation.

The task force had told her there were many openings.

"Ourbacklog could go down a lot faster if people would sign up for out-of-province [procedures], but it seems like some people are scared," Kurylo said in an interview with CBC earlier this week.

Sheonly became aware of the option herself after a friend showed her a news story, she said.

A woman, seated at a table, looks forward.
Kim Kurylo encourages eligible Manitobans to get their surgery out of province. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

Doctors Manitoba, which advocates for physicians in the province,saida lower than hoped for uptake for operations beyond Manitoba's bordersshouldn't come as a surprise to anyone.

Out-of-province travel can be difficult for patients, especiallythose waiting for joint replacements who may be experiencing mobility issues or in constant pain, spokesperson Keir Johnson said in an email.

"There are also very narrow eligibility criteria, with 15 specific criteriathat must be met to qualify for out-of-province surgery."

While out-of-province surgery may be a temporary solution to reduce the backlog, "the primary focus should be adding capacity right here in Manitoba,"Doctors Manitoba said.

Critics, including the Opposition NDP and Liberals, havesaid the Progressive Conservative government should be ashamed thehealth-care system has been strained to the point that patients must be sent away.

The Tories, however, say they're getting patients care as quickly as possible.

As of October, the pandemic backlog for hip or knee replacement surgery was 1,140 people.That tally does not count those individuals who were waiting before COVID-19 arrived.

Hip and knee surgery patients encouraged to consider surgery out-of-province

2 years ago
Duration 1:58
Hundreds of Manitoba patients waiting for hip and knee surgery will get a letter encouraging them to travel to the U.S. or Ontario for their procedure. The head of the province's diagnostic and surgical recovery task force says many patients have already taken up the offer.

Corrections

  • We initially reported that Dr. DavidMatear spoke to the CBC on Thursday. In fact, he spoke to the CBC on Tuesday.
    Dec 21, 2022 9:13 AM CT