'We need help': Moncton surgeon seeks provincial resources to shorten wait times - Action News
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New Brunswick

'We need help': Moncton surgeon seeks provincial resources to shorten wait times

An orthopedic surgeon is calling on the provincial government to allocate more resources to the two Moncton hospitals in the upcoming budget to address the backlog of patients waiting for knee and hip replacements.

Dr. Michael Forsythe says more resources needed for knee and hip replacements

Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Michael Forsythe, seen here with patient Vivian LeBlanc, says he's 'pleasantly optimistic' the province will come through with additional funding to address Moncton's lengthy wait times for knee and hip replacements. (Vanessa Blanch/CBC)

Anorthopedic surgeon is calling on the provincial government to allocate more resources to the two Moncton hospitals in the upcoming budget to address thebacklog of patients waiting forknee and hip replacements.

"I'm here today to basically plead our case,"Dr. MichaelForsythe told CBC's Information Morning Moncton on Friday.

Despite slight improvements in recent months, patients in Moncton can still wait two years for a knee replacement and up to a year and a half for a hip replacement longer than elsewhere in New Brunswick and up to three times the wait ofsome regions.

The national benchmark for both surgeries, according to the Department of Health, is 182 days.

"We need to deal with it now such that it's not goingto take 10 years to deal with the problem," said Forsythe, who works at the Moncton Hospital. "We can probably fix the problem in two to three years."

Health Minister VictorBoudreauvowed in October to address growing concerns about wait times at the Moncton Hospital and the Dr. Georges-L.-Dumont University Hospital Centre.

Forsythehopes some of the extra $230 million New Brunswick will be getting from the federal government over the next 10 years in a bilateral deal announced last month will be earmarked for dealing with the orthopedic backlog.

He said the Moncton Hospital has done as much as it can with existing resources during the past three months by keeping an operating room open two hours later twice a week "so we're able to get one extra total joint replacement done per day on those OR days."

It has also createdfour "swing" hospital beds, whichcan be opened up to accommodate joint replacementpatients, when needed.

As a result, the hospital has seen about a 20 per cent improvementin the number of surgeries being performed, said Forsythe.

I've been very encouraged with what our hospital has done so far to help the problem, but we need help from the provincial government to expand the program.- Michael Forsythe, surgeon

But an internal forecast model shows it needs to double the number of joint replacements it's been doing for the past two or three years to get the backlog under control.

"I've been very encouraged with what our hospital has done so far to help the problem, but we need help from the provincial government to expand the program," torunmoreoperating rooms, keepthemopen later, and addmore beds, saidForsythe.

He is"pleasantly optimistic," he said.

The health minister has saidfactors contributing to Moncton wait times include anaging population, in-province migration toward southern regions and human resource training.

Horizon Health has 'significant backlog'

Hospitals in the Horizon Health Network are also dealing with long wait times fororthopedic surgery and need help,according toGeriGeldart, vice-president of clinical.

"Our staffing situation has improved and we have been able to increase the number of procedures performed over the past six months," Geldart said in a statement.

"However, a significant backlog developed during [a staffing] shortage period and it will take additional resources to clear this backlog."

Geldart expects it will take "at least 12 to 18 months" before Horizon seesany improvement in wait times for the procedures.

"Because the logistics at each hospital are different, the solutions for each will be hospital specific," she said.

With files from Information Morning Moncton