medical wait times for patients seeking treatment across canada are now the longest on record, according to a new report by the fraser institute. the annual study, which surveyed almost 2,000 physicians across 12 medical specialties in 10 provinces, found that the median wait time for patients this year was 30 weeks from referral by a general practitioner, to consultation with a specialist, to treatment.
that’s an increase from 27.7 weeks in 2023 and is 222% longer than the 9.3 weeks recorded in 1993, the first year the fiscally conservative think tank began tracking data on medical wait times.
“while most canadians understand that wait times are a major problem, we’ve now reached an unprecedented and unfortunate milestone for delayed access to care,” said bacchus barua, co-author of the study, “waiting your turn: wait times for health care in canada 2024.”
the 30-week wait time in receiving medical treatment has two components — 15 weeks from the time a general practitioner refers a patient to a specialist until they are seen by the specialist, plus another 15 weeks following the consultation, before treatment begins.
among the various specialties, the shortest total wait times were for radiation oncology (4.5 weeks), medical oncology (4.7 weeks) and elective cardiovascular surgery (12.8 weeks). patients waited the longest for orthopedic surgery (57.5 weeks), neurosurgery (46.2 weeks), and plastic surgery (41.4 weeks).