'Heartbreaking situation' as patients face long waits for delayed surgeries - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:17 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

'Heartbreaking situation' as patients face long waits for delayed surgeries

Around 19,000 patients across the Champlain Local Health Integration Network are awaiting various surgeries and procedures, a backlog caused by a rise in COVID-19 cases during the pandemic's third wave that overwhelmed the province's health-care system.

Around 19K eastern Ontario patients awaiting elective surgeries, procedures

Blythe McKay had to have emergency surgery in May 2021 surgery normally considered elective when her Crohn's disease suddenly became urgent. While she had her operation, there are still roughly 19,000 patients in eastern Ontario waiting for elective procedures due to a backlog caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. (Olivier Hyland/CBC)

Three weeks ago, Blythe McKay started vomiting blood.

Days later, she ended up in hospital and was told she neededemergency surgery.

The operation, a treatment for her Crohn's disease, happened three days after she was scheduled for her first meeting with doctors to discuss when that surgery initially deemed elective would havetaken place.

She considers herself lucky.

"If I'd waited longer, it could have gotten more urgent," she said."If I just hadn't had some sudden worsening of the symptoms and just sort of gradually gotten worse, I probably would have lost my colon."

While McKayhad her operation, there are still roughly 19,000 patients across the Champlain Local Health Integration Network which encompasses an area from Deep River, Ont., to Cornwall, Ont. awaiting various surgeries and procedures, a backlog caused by a rise in COVID-19 cases during the pandemic's third wave that overwhelmed the province's health-care system.

Most hospitals across Ontario were ordered to stop performing all but emergency and life-saving surgery in early April.

That directive was lifted last week.

"I feel very fortunate about how things turned out," said McKay, who had known for months surgery was looming.

"It's been extremely stressful ... I'm finally feeling like, OK, now I can start focusing on recovery, rather being in this sort of horrible limbo situation."

Isabella Pileggi has been waiting since December for news of when she'll be having gallbladder surgery. She worried both about her pain intensifying and the possibility her gallbladder might rupture. (Olivier Hyland/CBC)

Clearing backlog will take 'many, many months'

That limbo is what Isabella Pileggi dreads. She began experiencing horrific pain last September, pain that causes her to double over multiple times a week, sometimes for hours.

Last winter, she was diagnosed withgallstones and will now have to have her gallbladder removed. She has no idea when that will happen.

"It's mixed emotions," she said. "You want the people with COVID to be taken care of, to get them healthy. You want the front-line workers to have a break because they've been going 24/7 for 15 months. But [my situation] is critical care."

At least I'd know there is an end in sight. And right now, there is no end in sight.- IsabellaPileggi

She also worries about having to take prescription morphinewhile waiting for her surgery,a drug she knows can be addictive.

Since the provincial directive was lifted, teams have been going through the backlog list and rescheduling surgeries based on priority, said Dr. Virginia Roth, chief of staff at The Ottawa Hospital (TOH).

But she warns that change won't be immediate.

"We will take many, many months, I think, to clear that backlog," she said.

Rothsaid hospitals are limited by staffing levels TOHhas redeployed 200 staff to work in COVID-19 areaslike the ICUand the number of in-patient beds available, which meansthey'll start with day surgeries.

"It is really a heartbreaking situation," she said, acknowledging the thousands of patients facing unknown waits."Many of them are also dealing with pain, loss of function. It has a huge impact on people's lives."

Several ambulances parked outside a hospital on a sunny day.
Non-urgent surgeries can now resume at The Ottawa Hospital and other hospitals in Ontario, but it could take months for the backlog to clear. (Brian Morris/CBC)

A lack of hope

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, TOHandthe Queensway Carleton Hospitalperformed around 65,000 surgeries and procedures a year, combined.

That dropped to just shy of 51,000 the past fiscal year.

The Ford government also allocated an extra $1.8 billion in the latest provincial budget to help hospitals care for COVID-19 patients and take care of the backlog of surgeries.

For Pileggi, beyond the pain she struggles with, she wants hope and that would comein the form of a date for her surgery.

"At least I'd know there is an end in sight. And right now, there is no end in sight."

With files from Mike Crawley

Add some good to your morning and evening.

More than the headlines. Subscribe to You Otta Know, the CBC Ottawa weekly newsletter.

...

The next issue of You Otta Know will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.