“our hospital could have kept going and i without a doubt could have kept operating,” he said. “it’s very frustrating when i’m trying to understand and piece together the logic.”
meanwhile, plans are underway to make up for the lost time.
b.c. may become a model of sorts. the province said in march it had cleared 95 per cent of its backlog, opening new and unused ors, adding hours throughout the week and hiring more surgeons, nurses and anesthetists.
some specialties have been experimenting with shorter hospital stays. that includes “same-day admissions” for knee and hip replacements, where the patient is sent home after the surgery, said bhandari.
even certain patients who have had major heart procedures are being discharged within a day to streamline use of hospital resources, said wijeysundera.
some provinces, such as alberta, quebec and b.c., have already been using private clinics to provide government-funded procedures. in quebec, 38,000 patients have received their surgery in such facilities to help fix the backlog, said a health ministry spokesman tuesday.
drawing on private, for-profit clinics is being discussed for low-risk cataract surgery from newfoundland to b.c., said mann.