What happened?
- Canadian doctor Joy Hataley, a family practice anesthetist in Kingston, Ontario, told CTV News she was “shocked” after trying to refer one of her patients to a neurologist at Kingston General Hospital and was told in a letter the wait time for new patients is 4.5 years.
- The outlet said that while Hataley was used to long wait times — particularly from specialists — she called the 4.5-year delay “insane.”
- “Initially I was just a bit stunned,” she told CTV News Toronto on Friday. “I actually thought I misread it.”
- “I put my reading glasses on — because I am that age — to check if it was a 1.5,” Hataley added. “I couldn’t fathom it was a 7.5. I walked to a physician’s room nearby me just to verify that I was actually reading 4.5.”
- She said such a wait time deems the referral moot: “Who knows what happens in 4.5 years?” Hataley noted to CTV News Toronto. “Will we even remember that we had a consult? Will we still be on the list?”
- Hataley posted an image of the letter to Twitter and asked Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins and Kingston MPP Sophie Kiwala for an explanation:
?Please explain @DrEricHoskins @SophieKiwala this 4.5 yr wait for #Healthcare in ON @picardonhealth @NeurologyToday http://pic.twitter.com/06WDGKQk1a
— Joy Hataley (@JoyHataley) November 1, 2017
What is Hataley saying about Canadian patient wait times in general?
- “I sense that this is not a problem, I perceive, to be in isolation,” she told CTV News. “This issue is an issue for people across the country.”
- “I don’t think this is the norm by any stretch of the imagination,” Hataley added, “but [the fact that] it even occurs at all is shocking.”
- She also told the outlet she believes the system has “hit a wall.”
- “My main message is: We need timely, consistent and reliable health care in our province and we do not have it,” she told CTV News.
What are other Canadian doctors saying?
- Dr. Shawn Whatley, president of the Ontario Medical Association, told CTV News the wait times are “atrocious.”
- Wealthier patients at least can travel to get care faster, he told the outlet, which creates “a massive two-tiered system.”
- “We’ve known about it for 15 years where people with means can get procedures and test more quickly,” Whatley added to CTV News.
- A 2016 Commonwealth Fund survey focusing on 11 developed countries found 56 per cent of Canadians waited more than four weeks to see a medical specialist compared to about 36 percent, which is the international average, the outlet reported.
How are Canadian institutions reacting?
- Kingston Health Sciences Centre told the outlet delays are “a challenge” across the board but the neurologist in this case is in high demand due to “referrals from a very large catchment area.”
- “Ensuring the lowest possible wait times for all parts of our health-care system is a key priority, particularly including referrals from general practitioners to specialists,” Laura Gallant, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Health and Long-term care, told Global News.
(H/T: Townhall)
via TheBlaze.com – Stories
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