Saskatchewan has longest waits in Canada for hip and knee replacement surgeries
A Saskatchewan NDP health critic says the province not only has the longest wait times in Canada for hip and knee surgeries, it ranks well below other jurisdictions.
Matt Love, who is the rural health critic for the Opposition party, pointed to recent data by the Canadian Institute for Health Information that showed median wait times for knee replacements was 467 days in Saskatchewan last year.
Manitoba came in second-last for knee replacements at 336 days, while the wait times in most of the remaining provinces ranged from 210 days to 284 days. Ontario had the shortest waits at 117 days.
"We're not even in just last place, we're in a category all our own, way at the bottom," Love said Thursday.
"And these aren't just numbers, these are Saskatchewan people, people who are waiting in pain for procedures that should have been delivered months ago."
Love also pointed out in the recent data that median wait times for hip replacements were 309 days in Saskatchewan last year.
Alberta and New Brunswick tied for second-last on hip replacements at 232 days. Ontario had the shortest waits at 108 days.
While Saskatchewan fared better on other surgeries, Love said wait times overall haven't budged or have increased over the past five years.
The COVID-19 pandemic also made wait times worse, as procedures were halted during the early days of the pandemic. Many employees
also left the profession or burned out, Love said.
The Saskatchewan Party government has said it has been hiring more health-care employees to address wait times. Since December, 485 graduate nurses and five registered nurses from the Philippines have been hired.
The government also plans to increase the number of surgeries completed this year, including having some done in private clinics.
In March, the province signed a $6-million agreement to send patients to Calgary for hip and knee surgeries as a way for people to get help sooner. Patents must pay for their travel.
NDP Leader Carla Beck said she isn't convinced these plans will work.
"There is the ability within the public system, if there were the will, to expand the capacity of operating room hours to increase availability to existing surgeons in the province, right now," Beck said Thursday. "What we lack is political will."
Beck said the government should also hire more staff and work with employees to ensure they don't leave.
She said employees are "begging to be at the table."
"We need to take them on it," Beck said. "If this government is going to continue to show that they're not interested in finding solutions, we're saying we are interested in those solutions."
-- This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 6, 2023.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Aviation experts say Russia's air defence fire likely caused Azerbaijan plane crash as nation mourns
Aviation experts said Thursday that Russian air defence fire was likely responsible for the Azerbaijani plane crash the day before that killed 38 people and left all 29 survivors injured.
Police identify victim of Christmas Day homicide in Hintonburg, charge suspect
The Ottawa Police Service says the victim who had been killed on Christmas Day in Hintonburg has been identified.
Teen actor Hudson Meek, who appeared in 'Baby Driver,' dies after falling from moving vehicle
Hudson Meek, the 16-year-old actor who appeared in 'Baby Driver,' died last week after falling from a moving vehicle in Vestavia Hills, Alabama, according to CNN affiliate WVTM.
Pizza deliverer in Florida charged with stabbing pregnant woman at motel after tip dispute
A pizza deliverer in central Florida has been charged with pushing her way into a motel room with an accomplice and stabbing a pregnant woman after a dispute over a tip, authorities said.
Raised in Sask. after his family fled Hungary, this man spent decades spying on communists for the RCMP
As a Communist Party member in Calgary in the early 1940s, Frank Hadesbeck performed clerical work at the party office, printed leaflets and sold books.
Cat food that caused bird-flu death of Oregon pet was distributed in B.C.: officials
Pet food contaminated with bird flu – which killed a house cat in Oregon – was distributed and sold in British Columbia, according to officials south of the border.
Unwanted gift card in your stocking? Don't let it go to waste
Gift cards can be a quick and easy present for those who don't know what to buy and offer the recipient a chance to pick out something nice for themselves, but sometimes they can still miss the mark.
Sinkhole prompts lane closures on Interstate 80 in New Jersey
A sinkhole that opened up Thursday along Interstate 80 in northern New Jersey forced authorities to close the heavily travelled highway's eastbound lanes.
Boxing Day in Canada: Small retailers fear big shopping day won't make up for tough year
It’s one of the busiest shopping days of the year: Boxing Day sees thousands of people head to malls and big box stores to find great deals. But it's not so simple for smaller shops.