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Manitoba

Manitoba pumps $5.3M into boosting hip, knee, cataract surgeries, reducing wait times

Manitoba is stepping up the number of hip and knee replacements and cataract surgeries done in the province, months after a report ranked Manitoba at or near the bottom in wait times for those procedures.

Funding means 1,000 more hip and knee replacements and 2,000 more cataract surgeries in 2019

Manitoba ranked at or near the bottom for wait times for knee and hip replacements, and cataract surgeries between 2016-2017, according to a CIHI report. (The Associated Press)

Manitoba is stepping up the number of hip and knee replacements and cataract surgeries done in the province, months after a report ranked Manitoba at or near the bottom in wait times for those procedures.

Health Minister Cameron Friesenannounced an injection ofmore than $5.3 million to perform at least 1,000 more hip and knee replacement surgeries in 2019 a 25 per cent increase. It will also fundat least 2,000 additional cataract surgeries next year, a 16 per cent increase, he said.

"This important investment by the Manitoba government will make it possible for patients to get access to these high-demand services sooner," saidRal Cloutier, CEO of the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority.

More than 4,100 hip and knee replacements and 12,900 cataract surgeries were performed in Manitoba in 2017-18. However, areport released in April by theCanadian Institute for Health Informationranked Manitoba last for the percentage of people waiting longer than therecommended 16-week time period for cataract surgery.

The percentage of patients who received the procedure within thatperiod fell from 41 per cent to 32 per cent between 2015 and 2017, according to the CIHI report.

Similarly, the percentage of patients who received hip replacements within the recommended six-month time period fell from 69 to 53 per cent, while 43per cent of patients received knee replacements within six months in 2017, down from 64 per cent two years earlier.

"When you compare Manitoba to other provinces, or the Canadian average, we're [in10thspot] out of 10 bottom of the barrel when it comes to cataracts, and nine out of 10 when it comes to hips and knees,"Friesensaid Thursday atConcordiaHospital, the main centre in the city for hip and knee replacements.

"Those are numbers we must improve. Manitoba patients deserve better health care sooner."

Additional cataract surgeries will take place at Misericordia Health Centre, while additional hip and knee surgeries will be performed at Concordia as well as Grace Hospital, the Health Sciences Centre,and the Boundary Trails Health Centre in southern Manitoba.

"The reality is that we are seeing an increased and sustained demand for these procedures as our population ages," said Dr. Jack McPherson, co-chair with theWait Times Reduction Task Force.

"We are very pleased the government of Manitoba adopted our recommendation, and believe it will significantly augment the progress we have made to date in completing more procedures and ultimately reducing the amount of time patients currently wait."

'You're going to see an impact'

Friesendoesn't expect the added surgeries will translate into more jobs, or the need for additional equipment.

"At this point in time we believe we can use existing resources. This increase is for the surgeries themselves not to purchase new technical equipment," he said, citing improved technologies and scheduling efficiencies as ways to get the work donewithout more resources.

As forspecific reduction targets, Friesensaid there are no goals at this pointother than "we want wait times to drop." He said those times will bemeasured along the way and reported backin late 2019.

"We know what this represents in terms of capacity [1,000 more hip and knee replacements,2,000 more cataract surgeries] and now we have to see what it's going to mean in terms of wait-time reduction," he said.

"But one thing's for certainyou're going to see an impact on people who are on the wait lists."