Questions swirl around joint surgery 'partnership' at The Ottawa Hospital - Action News
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Questions swirl around joint surgery 'partnership' at The Ottawa Hospital

An enigmatic partnership between The Ottawa Hospital (TOH) and a private entity run by a group of surgeons to perform hip and knee replacements at the Riverside campus on weekends is causing concern among advocates who worry it represents a further step toward privatization of Ontario's health-care system.

Private group performing hip, knee operations at Riverside campus on Saturdays

A doctor looks at a computer screen showing images of a patient's knee replacement surgery.
A doctor studies images of a patient's knee replacement surgery at a private facility in Laval, Que. On Saturday, surgeons belonging to a private group completed 10 joint operations at the Riverside campus of The Ottawa Hospital. (Louis-Marie Philidor/CBC)

An enigmatic partnership between The Ottawa Hospital (TOH) and a private entity run by a group of surgeons to perform hip and knee replacements at the Riverside campus on weekends is causing concern among advocates who worry it represents a further step toward privatization of Ontario's health-care system.

CBC News first learned of the arrangement between Ottawa's largest hospitaland Academic Orthopedic Surgical Associates of Ottawa Inc. (AOAO) in mid-January. A search ofthe Ontario Business Registry showsAOAOwas incorporated on Dec. 15, 2021, and includes eight surgeons with links to TOH.

The further we get into it, the more questions we have that aren't answered.- Rachel Muir, Ontario Nurses' Association

According to an email sent to the personal addresses of severalTOH employees in January, AOAO was seeking surgical support staff to help with "a pilot project to help address the backlog of total joint replacement cases," beginning Feb. 25.

The email, which came from the personal address of another hospital employee, noted the project, "although supported by, is not part of TOH," and said interested employees would be paid a per diem rate by AOAO.

When CBCfirst inquired about the arrangement on Jan. 16, TOHresponded three days later with a 17-word statement: "Talks are underway to expand the capacity for orthopedic surgery as part of our integrated regional plan."

Pressed for further information, the hospital confirmed on Jan. 27 that it and its department of orthopedic surgerywere "working with AOAO to help increase access to surgical care for our patients," and said details were still in the works.

On Feb. 16, the hospital announced publicly that it's "working with [AOAO]to increase capacity for orthopedic procedures, suchas hip and knee replacements."

10 surgeries performed Saturday

The announcement confirmed the surgerieswould take place at the Riverside campus on Saturdays, starting nine days later on Feb. 25, in operating rooms that were"previously unused on weekends."

On Wednesday, TOH confirmed that 10 joint surgeries were performedon Saturday.

TOH also confirmed Wednesday that "all of the patients receiving surgery through AOAO are TOH patients and all services are billed through OHIP, as per standard practice."

Five ambulances outside a hospital at night.
The Ottawa Hospital initially provided scant information to CBC News about its partnership with Academic Orthopedic Surgical Associates of Ottawa Inc. Pictured here is the hospital's Civic campus. (Chris Rands/CBC)

It's not entirely clear how those patients are chosen, nor is it clear how AOAO is paying TOH for the use of thehospital's operating rooms, equipment and other supplies. Repeated calls and emails to the physicianlisted on the business registry as AOAO's chair have gone unanswered.

CBC News has learned that registered nurses who agree to work on Saturdays are being offered $750 for a 10-hour shift, approximately double what they'd be paid for a regular eight-hour shift at the hospital. Registered practical nurses are being offered $550 a day to work for AOAO, while clerical staff are being offered $600.

CBC News has also learned those employees are responsible for their own insurance coverage while working outside the normal hospital structure.

Unanswered questions

Rachel Muir, a registered nurse andthe Ontario Nurses' Association (ONA) bargaining unit president at TOH, said the ONA first became aware of the partnership between the hospital and AOAOin mid-February, and only learned the surgeries were going ahead at the Riverside the day before they occurred.

Muir said she's particularly concerned for nurseswho have agreed to take on the extra shifts, because certain safeguards that are in place at the hospital during the week could be absent on weekends.

"So if there's an emergency, what's going to happen?" Muir asked."We don't know what policies and protocols and procedures are in place. Are they using the TOH ones, or have they created their own?"

Muir said that lack of clarity is typical of the general secrecy surrounding the project.

"The further we get into it, the more questions we have that aren't answered," she said.

The registered practical nurses and clerical staff who have volunteered to work at the Riverside on Saturdays are represented by different unions.

Critics outline concerns about TOH private partnership

2 years ago
Duration 0:58
Advocates say there are unanswered questions about a partnership between The Ottawa Hospital and a private entity to perform hip and knee replacements at the Riverside campus on weekends

A 'step towardprivatization'

The decision to allow a private entity to operate out of a publicly funded hospital, and to recruit staff from the limited existing supply of health-care workers, is causing concern among some advocateswho aren't buying the argument that the only alternative is to let the facilities sit empty.

"We have a premier in this province who's told us many times now that our existing hospitals have no capacity to deal with the wait-lists,"Ed Cashman, co-chair of the Ottawa Health Coalition, told Radio-Canada during a small demonstration outside the Riverside on Saturday morning.

"Well, this is an example right here in Ottawa that simply by looking around you can find empty operating rooms. They could have done that with existing facilities and existing people."

Doug Angus, professor emeritus at the University of Ottawa's Telfer School of Management and an expert in public health policy, has similar questions.

"If the capacity could be used at the Riverside campus of The Ottawa Hospital on weekends, then why doesn't that happen just as a matter of routine from the hospital itself, within the existing OHIP arrangement?" he asked.

"Why don't we make better use of the existing facilities that we currently have in the hospitals?"

Angus is also concerned that by recruiting hospital staff and offering relatively generous compensation, partnerships such as the one between TOH and AOAO risk further diminishing the available supply of experienced health-care workers.

Muir, whose organization represents 68,000 health-care professionals in the province, shares those concerns.

"You're hiring them away from the public institutions to work in a private institution at a higher rate," she said."Why not pay the nurses who are already there? Why not use what you already have instead of taking this step toward privatization?"

A politician makes an announcement while a province's premier stands behind her.
Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones makes an announcement with Premier Doug Ford in Toronto on Jan. 16. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Province applauds 'innovative' partnership

In January, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Health Minister Sylvia Jones announced a plan to expand thenumber and range of medical procedures performed in privately runclinics asthe provincedeals with a surgical backlog made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The expansion is planned in three phases, beginning with cataract surgeries. Hip and knee surgeries will be offered in2024.

CBC News first contacted the Ministry of Health on Jan. 26 to inquire about the partnership between TOH and AOAO, but after initially acknowledging the request, the ministry did not respond to numerous calls and emails.

An access to information request submitted by CBC last month turned up no records regarding the partnership, according to the ministry.

In an email onWednesday, a spokesperson for Jones told CBC: "We are excited to see our partners, like the Ottawa Hospital,taking innovative action to eliminate the joint replacement surgical backlog and reduce patient wait times so more Ontarians can receive the care they need, closer to home.

"The Ottawa Hospital is doing its part in helping clear the region's surgical backlog by opening up operating rooms to existing staff on the weekend when they are not in use by the hospital."