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Science

Priority surgery wait times improve

At least 75 per cent of surgery patients in Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec are now consistently getting priority surgeries within benchmark timeframes, according to a new report.

At least 75 per cent of surgery patients in Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec are now consistently getting priority surgeries within benchmark timeframes, according to a new report.

From a national standpoint, the fact all provinces are now measuring waits with the same benchmarks and doing "fairly well' is a good story, said Jenny Lineker, program lead for emerging issues with the Canadian Institute Health Information (CIHI) in Toronto.

CIHI released its report, Wait Times Tables Comparison by Province, 2010, on Wednesday, a report that looks at patient wait times for the five priority areas identified by first ministers in 2004:

  • Cancer treatment.
  • Cardiac care.
  • Sight restoration.
  • Joint replacement.
  • Diagnostic imaging.

All provinces started tackling the five priority areas with various subpriorities and starting points, Lineker noted.

But only the three most populous provinces Ontario, B.C. and Quebec are doing consistently well for knee replacement surgery, which continues to have the longest waits.

Totalwaits for patients missed

People are having knee replacements at younger ages, and the sheer volume of people in the queue might be a contributing factor, Lineker said.

The general trend is in the right direction, said Dr. Chris Simpson, head of the cardiology division at Queen's University School of Medicine in Kingston, Ont.

But there is still a bit of discrepancy in waits for knee replacements surgery, with 75 per cent of patients in Newfoundland and Labrador, P.E.I., Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta not receiving the surgery within the 26-week benchmark.

The downside of the current approach to wait times is the focus on access to tests or procedures, which are just one part of the wait patients face, said Simpson, who co-chaired a 2007 conference on wait times.

Patients are happy to get surgery faster but ifthey have towait longertosee an orthopedic surgeon in the first placethen they may not gain overall, andthe impact on their quality of life is much greater than what is being measured, he said.

The Canadian Medical Association's approach is to focus on the whole wait patients face, from the time they first need to see a doctor, getting in to see a specialist, wait for tests and surgery, and then rehab, Simpson said.

Simpson applauded provinces and medical societies for the progress but stressed more work needs to be done.

"I think we can't be complacent," Simpson said. "I think it needs a culture ofcontinuous improvement, and I think public pressure needs to be put on all the time to make sure that patients have access to all the thingsthey need."

Patients are gracious aboutwaiting but they want to know how long they will wait and that it is safe to wait, he added.

Cardiac waits

For the first time, the institute looked at bypass surgery waits by priority levelranging fromurgent to elective,but this only applies to one per cent of cardiac patients in the country, Simpson said. Patients needing other procedures such as pacemakers, stents and angioplasty are left out.

Provinces are also using a six-month benchmark for bypass.But cardiac specialists use a six-week medically acceptable maximum wait timebased on evidence published in medical literature and expert opinion, Simpson said.

The report focused on provincial comparisons, but a separate analysis by the institute on meeting benchmarks showed that across Canada benchmarks were met for:

  • 86 per cent for hip replacements.
  • 81 per cent for knee replacements.
  • 87 per cent for cataract surgery.
  • 86 per cent for cardiac by pass surgery.
  • 79 per cent for hip fracture (excluding Quebec which measures this wait differently)

Some provinces have also expandedmeasurements to other areas such as emergency department and primary care waits, Lineker said.

Provinces completing 75% of procedures within benchmark timeframes

Hip replacement

Surgery within 26 weeks

Knee replacement

Surgery within 26 weeks

Cataract surgery *

Surgery within 16 weeks

Hip fracture repair

Surgery within 48 hours

Cancer - radiation treatment

Treatment within4 weeks (28 days)of being ready to treat

N.L. No No Yes Nodata available Yes (within 30 days)
P.E.I Yes No Yes Nodata available Yes
N.S. No No No Yes No
N.B. Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Que. Yes Yes Nodata available Nodata available Yes
Ont. Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Man. No No Yes Yes Yes
Sask. No No Yes Yes Yes
Alta. Yes No No Yes No
B.C. Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

Source: Canadian Institute for Health Information

* The pan-Canadian benchmarks specifies surgery within 16 weeks for patients who are at high risk. There isnot yetconsensuson a definition of "high risk," so this benchmark appliesacross all priority levels.