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Toronto

Ontario pediatric ICUs operating above capacity, provincial data shows

New data shows Ontario's pediatric intensive care units are operating over capacity, with the number of children receiving care exceeding the number of available beds across the province as respiratory illnesses surge in kids.

Ontario has 112 intensive care beds for kids, but there's 122 children in pediatric ICUs

A nurse in a personal protective equipment walks down a hospital corridor.
Critical Care Services Ontario's daily census shows there are currently 122 children in pediatric ICUs, up from 111 the day before. Children's hospitals have said the majority of kids in intensive care are five years old and younger. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

New data shows Ontario's pediatric intensive care units are operating over capacity, with the number of children receiving care exceeding the number of available beds across the province as respiratory illnesses surge in kids.

Critical Care Services Ontario's daily census shows there are currently 122 children in pediatric ICUs, up from 111 the day before.

Ontario has a total of 112 intensive care beds for children.

"This is a point to what I would characterize a point of crisis for pediatric care across the province,"saidDr. Lennox Huang, an intensive care physician and the chief medical officer at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children.

"All of our predictions ... would indicate that things are going to get worse before they're better."

Huang says the number of children needing ventilatorsand respiratory support is about 50 per cent higher compared to the autumnof 2019, the last fall season before the pandemic hit.

While not the main driver of the surge, the shortage of children's medicine is also impacting emergency patient volumes, since parents rely on over-the-counter medicine to keep their children comfortable at home, Huangsays.

Children and teens are arriving atemergency departments at a rate two-to-three times higher than usual this time of year, according to statistics from Acute Care Enhanced Surveillance, a real-time Ontario-wide system that monitors hospital registration records.

There'sbeen an average of 1,414 children aged four and under visiting emergency departments over the last week in the province, compared to the historical seven-day average of 560. For those aged five to 17, there havebeen on average 1,210 visits toemergency departments over the last week, compared with a historical average of 325.

Last week, Ontario Health directed general hospitals to accept children 14 and older who need critical care in an effort to ease the burden on pediatric facilities.

WATCH | Toronto doctor talks about pressures on hospitals:

Time to bring back mask mandate, says Toronto doctor

2 years ago
Duration 5:18
Dr. Fahad Razak, internist at St. Michael's Hospital, says the triple threat posed by COVID-19, RSV and influenza should be dealt with through public health measures like mask mandates.

Hannah Jensen, spokesperson for the province's minister of health, told CBC Toronto in an email that the province is working with public health units to "monitor impacts on the health system" during "respiratory illness season."

"Our government is in constant contact with our pediatric hospitals, Ontario Health, and other health system partners to alleviate critical care pressures and ensure all patients receive the care they need," Jensen said.

Parents 'devastated' after surgerycancelled

Jolleen Thibertsays she spent the past two weeks making sure her four-year-old son Sawyer, who has autism, would be ready for his surgery Thursday at Lakeridge Health in Oshawa, Ont.

Thibert says because of his obstructive sleep apnea, she needs to sit by his bedside to make sure he's breathing. He was scheduled to get his tonsils and adenoidsremoved to help him sleep better at night.

But upon their arrival atthe hospital, the family was told the operationwas cancelled, along with all other elective pediatric surgeries,because there were too many sick children in hospital and not enough staff to go around.

"We're devastated and we're scaredbecause what if he gets what's going around? What's going to happen?" said Thibert.

"You're basically giving him a bed no matter what because if he gets a virus, he doesn't breathe, and he will likely end up right back therebut an emergent case."

Jolleen Thibert says the province is failing the most vulnerable, like her son Sawyer who has autism, who rely on Ontario's health-care system for services and support. (Keith Burgess/CBC and Submitted by Jolleen Thibert)

An email from Lakeridge Health says the hospital is just one of many across Ontarioseeing a high volume of pediatric patients due to an increase inrespiratory illnesses.

While all urgent and priority pediatric surgeries will continue, the hospital confirms itreduced the number of elective in-patient operationsstarting Thursday untilDec. 10 to "ensure the safest environment for patients, while balancing critical staffing resources and increased patient volumes."

Ontario Health's chief medical director Dr. Chris Simpson sayshospitals will be using a "dimmer switch" on surgeries, rather than cancelling surgeries outright as they did during some of the worst waves of the COVID-19 pandemic.

There are some 250,000 surgeries backlogged, says Simpson. That's roughly the same number before the pandemic, he says,but that people are now waiting longer to get those surgeries about 45 per cent are waiting longer than the clinically determined benchmark, despite progress made in tackling it.

Thibert says the cancelled surgery is part of a long-standing trend for her two children, who both have autism.

"This isn't the first time over the past few years that my children needed health care for severe problems and couldn't get it," she said.

Time for masks, vaccinations, doctors say

Dr. Fahad Razak,an internist at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto and an assistant professor at the University of Torontowith research expertise in global health and health services, told CBC News Thursday that data from other parts of the world suggestsit will be a difficult season for influenza, let alone COVID-19 andrespiratory syncytial virus, or RSV.

He is recommending that Ontarians get vaccinated for both the flu and COVID-19 now if they haven't already, and to start wearing masks again in indoor spaces.

"There is a limit to what individuals can do, and this is where there is a need for collective actions public health measures," he said.

A woman with long black hear who is wearing a mask holds a syringe.
Health experts are recommending that Ontarians get vaccinated for both influenza and COVID-19. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Toronto emergency care physician Dr. Kashif Pirzadaechoesthat sentiment.

"Slow this down, buy the hospitals time to catch up," he said. "Buy a breather for our health system to catch its breath."

Pirzadaalso saysparents should consider taking children to hospital when they have afever that lasts longer than four to five days, if they won't eat or drink anythingeven when taking medication, or if they are breathing very quickly or have "very noisy breathing" with wheezing and crackles.

"Clearly something wrong is happening right now," he said.

With files from The Canadian Press, Lorenda Reddekopp and Vanessa Balintec