Related News

School cancelled in N.B., P.E.I. on Monday due to freezing rain warning across Atlantic Canada

School cancelled in N.B., P.E.I. on Monday due to freezing rain warning across Atlantic Canada

March 31, 2025
John Hogan sworn in as N.L.’s 15th premier

John Hogan sworn in as N.L.’s 15th premier

May 9, 2025
‘There’s an investigation’: NHL player’s text shown at sex assault trial of ex-world junior teammates

‘There’s an investigation’: NHL player’s text shown at sex assault trial of ex-world junior teammates

April 25, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding

Related News

School cancelled in N.B., P.E.I. on Monday due to freezing rain warning across Atlantic Canada

School cancelled in N.B., P.E.I. on Monday due to freezing rain warning across Atlantic Canada

March 31, 2025
John Hogan sworn in as N.L.’s 15th premier

John Hogan sworn in as N.L.’s 15th premier

May 9, 2025
‘There’s an investigation’: NHL player’s text shown at sex assault trial of ex-world junior teammates

‘There’s an investigation’: NHL player’s text shown at sex assault trial of ex-world junior teammates

April 25, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple
No Result
View All Result
CONTRIBUTE
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple
No Result
View All Result
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
No Result
View All Result
Home Canadian news feed

It’s much faster to get hip or knee replacements if there’s a central waitlist: study

Sarah Taylor by Sarah Taylor
May 20, 2025
in Canadian news feed
0
It’s much faster to get hip or knee replacements if there’s a central waitlist: study
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Canadians who need a hip or knee replacement could get the surgery more quickly — without adding to health-care budgets or opening more operating rooms — if central waitlists were created, the author of a new study says. 

You might also like

Number of reported bedsores in Nova Scotia hospitals soar

How a judge-alone trial may impact the Hockey Canada sexual assault case

What can Toronto’s real estate industry do to solve the city’s big problem of small condos?

The findings, published in Tuesday’s issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal, suggest it’s significantly faster to add patients to a central list where they can see any surgeon in their area, compared to each surgeon having their own waitlists. 

Right now in Ontario, a primary care provider, such as your family doctor, refers you to a surgeon or physiotherapist to decide whether surgery is needed. If it is, you’ll be put on one surgeon’s waiting list, which could be long or short. 

Often, it’s a long wait — in Canada, only two-thirds of patients receive their hip replacement within the 26-week recommended standard, according to data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information. For knee replacements, only 59 per cent are done within that time.

So that’s prompted some provinces to experiment with how they assign surgery patients to waitlists, with the goal of shortening overall wait times.

For the study, Dr. David Urbach, head of the surgery department at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto, and his team compared three models based on data collected from more than 17,000 patients across Ontario who were referred for hip or knee replacements in 2017. 

The three models were:

Option 1: A family doctor refers you for assessment to a pool of surgeons or physiotherapists in the part of the province where you live. If you need surgery, you’re assigned a surgeon and put on their waitlist.

Option 2: The family doctor refers you to a specific surgeon or physiotherapist to decide whether surgery is needed. If you need an operation, then you’re put in a pool for the next available surgeon in the part of the province where you live.

Option 3: A combination of the first two: Your family doctor puts the request for assessment into a central pool — and, if you need surgery, you enter a second pool that includes all the qualified surgeons in your area and would see the next one available.

Currently, patients awaiting joint replacements are like customers at a grocery store, Urbach said in an interview — they’re stuck in a line, even if another checkout opens up. 

But the better option for surgery would be akin to going to the bank, where everybody moves through a common line and waits the shortest possible time.

WATCH | Hospital replaces hips in 35 minutes:

How a hospital is doing hip replacements in 35 minutes

When it comes to wait times, Urbach said the study found that random factors can crop up and slow down one surgeon — like one having an already long wait list and limited operating room time in a more rural area. 

Priority for joint replacement surgery also depends on criteria like the degree of pain and disability and the risk of a worse outcome with a delay in surgery.

In Ontario, the goal is for a patient to wait no longer than six months for a consultation, with the maximum wait for the surgery itself being another six months, the researchers said.

For top priority cases, 90 days is the target wait time for those on a single surgeon’s list, while the study found that comparable patients in the regional pool made it through in 84 days.

In the study, Option 3 — where there was a central intake for consultation and for surgery — nearly halved wait times for the vast majority of patients in all regions, ranging from 111 fewer days in Toronto (from 257 to 146 days) to 281 days in Ontario West (from 536 to 255 days).

Much of the wait time for joint replacements was for the surgery itself and not the consultation, the researchers found.

“Unless you introduce a team-based model of care, you just have to wait until a spot opens up and that could be very long,” Urbach said. “That could be a year, year-and-a-half or longer.”

Canadians may have heard of team-based primary care, where patients have access to a well-connected interprofessional team such as family doctors, nurse practitioners, social workers and dietitians.

Similarly, in team-based surgical care, a group of surgeons takes the next patient in order of priority, even if a patient’s particular surgeon has a very long list, Urbach said.

Asked what kind of reaction surgeons have given to team-based surgical care so far, Urbach said many are skeptical about moving away from keeping their own list of patients.

“They’re concerned that they’ll lose their source of referrals,” Urbach said.

Dr. Olufemi Ayeni, president of the Canadian Orthopaedic Association and an orthopedic surgeon at McMaster, said he sees that view dissipating among those in the profession.

“I think there will be some openness and there’s definitely been a culture shift within orthopedics,” Ayeni said. “We don’t like hearing about patients who are suffering, needing pain medications. It feeds into other concerns [such as] opioid use.”

The study’s authors acknowledged that unless surgeons believe that team-based models of care are beneficial to them and do not threaten their autonomy or opportunities for income and professional advancement, “these models of care are unlikely to be viable in Canadian health systems in which physicians are highly independent.”

Ayeni agreed, saying otherwise the response to team-based care among surgeons will be muted.

Mohamed Alarakhia, a family physician and managing director of the non-profit eHealth Centre for Excellence in Kitchener, Ont., uses e-referrals for specialists. Alarakhia said it has already reduced orthopedic wait times by 54 days.

Using a central intake for both assessment and surgeries equalizes wait times overall among surgeons, Alarakhia said.

“We have examples in this province of where we’ve figured it out and across the country where they’ve done central intake,” Alarakhia said, giving Quebec and Alberta as examples.

“I believe we can solve these problems if we get some of these things in place.”

Health PEI said it’s now adopting a centralized waitlist management system for surgical care, including hip and knee replacements.

Read Entire Article
Tags: Canada NewsCBC.ca
Share30Tweet19
Sarah Taylor

Sarah Taylor

Recommended For You

Number of reported bedsores in Nova Scotia hospitals soar

by Sarah Taylor
May 20, 2025
0
Number of reported bedsores in Nova Scotia hospitals soar

The number of serious bedsores reportedly found in patients in Nova Scotia hospitals has risen, but the province says it is only because it is counting them differentlyHowever, a...

Read more

How a judge-alone trial may impact the Hockey Canada sexual assault case

by Sarah Taylor
May 20, 2025
0
How a judge-alone trial may impact the Hockey Canada sexual assault case

Justice Maria Carroccia's decision to discharge the jurors in the case against five former world junior hockey players charged with sexually assaulting a woman in a London, Ont, hotel room...

Read more

What can Toronto’s real estate industry do to solve the city’s big problem of small condos?

by Sarah Taylor
May 20, 2025
0
What can Toronto’s real estate industry do to solve the city’s big problem of small condos?

In Toronto, towers upon towers of small condo units fill block after block downtown Condo sales across the board are slumping in Canada's biggest cities as supply soars and...

Read more

Their families never accepted the official account of their deaths. Now police are taking another look

by Sarah Taylor
May 20, 2025
0
Their families never accepted the official account of their deaths. Now police are taking another look

"Nothing's the same as it was before," says Jenni Wannamaker, not far from the waters of the Bay of Quinte where she lost her brother 10 years agoWannamaker lives in...

Read more

Residents of ‘Canada’s smallest town’ are moving out

by Sarah Taylor
May 20, 2025
0
Residents of ‘Canada’s smallest town’ are moving out

It's the little things that Don Collins will miss Daily reminders of seclusion and isolation from his hometown in Tilt Cove, NLFeeding birds on his front deck Exploring the area...

Read more
Next Post
Number of reported bedsores in Nova Scotia hospitals soar

Number of reported bedsores in Nova Scotia hospitals soar

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

School cancelled in N.B., P.E.I. on Monday due to freezing rain warning across Atlantic Canada

School cancelled in N.B., P.E.I. on Monday due to freezing rain warning across Atlantic Canada

March 31, 2025
John Hogan sworn in as N.L.’s 15th premier

John Hogan sworn in as N.L.’s 15th premier

May 9, 2025
‘There’s an investigation’: NHL player’s text shown at sex assault trial of ex-world junior teammates

‘There’s an investigation’: NHL player’s text shown at sex assault trial of ex-world junior teammates

April 25, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
CANADIANA NEWS – AI Curated content

CANADIANA.NEWS will be firmly committed to the public interest and democratic values.

CATEGORIES

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding

BROWSE BY TAG

Canada News CBC.ca Golf Hockey Lifehacker Ludwig-van.com Skateboarding tomsguide.com

© 2025 canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple

© 2025 canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.