Publicly funded physio assessments fell 85% in Winnipeg after services consolidated in 2017: study - Action News
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Manitoba

Publicly funded physio assessments fell 85% in Winnipeg after services consolidated in 2017: study

The number of publicly funded physio assessments in Winnipeg has plummetedsince all outpatient services were consolidated into a singlefacility, according to a new University of Manitoba study.

Health authority cut outpatient physio services at hospitals except HSC in 2017 to save on costs

Physiotherapist working examining treating injured arm of a male patient.
A new University of Manitoba study found that initial outpatient physiotherapy assessments dropped from an average of 794 in the two years before services were consolidated at Health Sciences Centre to an average of 110 monthly in the five years following. (Tualek Photography/Shutterstock)

The number of publicly funded physiotherapy assessments in Winnipeg has plummeted in the yearssince all outpatient services were consolidated into a singlefacility, a new study says.

Researchers at the University of Manitoba say inthe 23 months before the consolidation in late 2017, there were a total of18,261 initial outpatient assessments, compared to6,715 assessments over the61 months following.

That means theaverage number of assessments each month went from794 in the two yearsbefore consolidation, to an average of110 monthly in the five years following, according to results from the study released this week a drop of more than 85 per cent.

The study's authors warn that many patients who used to have public coverage may be falling through the cracks.

"Seeing a physiotherapist isn't cheap in the private sector," said Joanne Parsons, an associate professor at the university'sdepartment of physical therapy and the study's primary author.

"Given the limitations on access to publicly funded physio now and the barriers to private care, we suspect that there's a large segment of the population that could be benefiting from physio care but is not able to access it."

The report has been peer-reviewed andapproved for publishing in the journal Physiotherapy Canada. Researchers looked at a database of all publicly funded musculoskeletal physiotherapy appointments in Winnipeg between Jan. 1, 2016, and Dec. 31, 2022.

A woman
Joanne Parsons, an associate professor at the university's department of physical therapy and the study's primary author, says new patient eligibility criteria introduced in 2017 left out several chronic conditions. (Submitted by Joanne Parsons)

"Atthe end of 2017, there were some significant budget cuts to health care," Parsons said, afterthe Winnipeg Regional Health Authority shuttered outpatient physiotherapy services in seven hospitals, with the city's Health Sciences Centre becoming the only institution offering those publicly funded services.

Those changes came amidst sweeping health-care reforms brought in under the former Progressive Conservative government, in an effort to cut costs.

Funding for physiotherapy staff was cut by two-thirds, and new patient eligibility criteria left out several chronic conditions, according to the U of M report.

"Common things like tennis elbow, neck pain, ankle sprains, rotator cuff, tendinitis are not covered anymore," Parsons said.

Patients with surgical knee conditions, the type most commonly seen pre-consolidation, fell from 13.2 per cent to only 2.8 per cent of the total sample, the study says.

The province reinstituted coverage for patients recovering from hip and knee replacement surgery in 2023 through private physiotherapy clinics. Parsons saidthat may have helped fill some gaps, but still left out several previously covered diagnoses.

She said previous research found those accessing private physiotherapists in Winnipegdon't align withthe city's broader demographics. Compared to the city's general population, those accessing private physio are more likely to have higher incomes and be well-educated, and are less likely to identify as Indigenous or a visible minority.

Parsons said an initial assessment at a private physiotherapist can run up to $120, which can be "fairly pricey" for anyone seeking treatment.

Low-income Manitobans 'left to live in pain': association

The Manitoba Physiotherapy Association says the results showpeople without third-party insurance or a good income can't get the care they need.

"Certain groups who don't have access to care that would otherwise improve their life, they're left to live in pain," said president Derek Purvis.

"Surgical outcomes are shown to be greatly better if you get physiotherapy after surgery. Those post-op patients are a big groupthat are missing out."

Cars drive down a road past a building complex and under a glass-enclosed pedestrian bridge that says
The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority shuttered outpatient physiotherapy services in seven hospitals in 2017, with the city's Health Sciences Centre becoming the only institution offering such services. (CBC/Radio-Canada)

Wait times for services fell from a median of 15 days to a week after consolidation as there were fewer patients, the report says. But treatment duration has increased, and the number of appointments per patient has also dropped, it says.

Purvis said that indicates people have less access to their therapist, which may lead to a worse quality of care.

"You need to follow up with your therapist," he said. "Not being able to access your therapist leaves a lot of the programs home-based, and that's often not enough."

Parsons said most other provinces have some sort of access to physiotherapy services based on income, and that she recommends Manitoba to create such a program.

The studyalso calls for better data on patients' rehabilitation, so there is a more accurate picture of treatment outcomes.