a 2017 oecd ranking also found that canada was one of the countries least likely to have an acute care bed available for use. even before covid-19, 91.6 per cent of canadian acute care beds already had someone in them, a rate that was worse only in israel and ireland. in the u.s., average occupancy rate on acute care beds was just 64 per cent. in the u.k. it was 84.3 per cent.
our rate of overall hospital beds is also one of the worst in the oecd
canada also ranks near the back of the pack in overall hospital beds. the latest numbers from the oecd show canada with
just one hospital bed for every 400 citizens, a ratio that put us in the bottom tier of oecd countries. in france, there’s a hospital bed for every 172 citizens, and in japan (the first place contender) there’s a bed for every 78 people.
the united states also lags behind much of the developed world in terms of relative hospital beds. at one bed for every 357 people, the americans are only two spots ahead of canada in the oecd ranking. tellingly, the omicron surge is yielding many of the same scenes of overstretched hospitals in the u.s. as in canada. michigan, for instance, called in military help for its overwhelmed emergency rooms
just before christmas.and yet, there are few covid-battered jurisdictions in canada that wouldn’t envy the hospital capacity of their u.s. neighbours. alberta, canada’s richest province, has roughly the same population as the poorest state, alabama (4.4 million vs. 4.9 million, respectively). and yet, in the delta wave that swept both jurisdictions in october, alabama had
1,531 icu beds to 370 in alberta.as of last wednesday, ontario was reporting
2,343 staffed icu beds, of which 489 contained a patient with covid-19.
just across the border in new york state, there were 34,869 icu beds. even accounting for new york’s larger population (19 million vs. 14 million in ontario), that’s more than 10 times as many icu beds.
it’s extraordinarily easy for the system to become overwhelmed
even before the first case of covid-19 was confirmed in north america, brampton, ont., mayor patrick brown was declaring a “health-care emergency” due to excessive wait times at the city’s hospitals. “we were consistently over 100% capacity and this was before the pandemic even started,”
he wrote in a recent tweet.