Tuesday, April 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Surgery backlog could take 84 weeks to clear: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Sep, 2020 07:32 PM
  • Surgery backlog could take 84 weeks to clear: study

A new study suggests it could take more than a year and a half to clear the backlog of surgeries in Ontario hospitals caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Modelling research published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal says the estimated time to clear surgeries postponed due to the pandemic is 84 weeks, with a target of 717 surgeries per week.

The provincial government instructed Ontario hospitals to cancel elective surgeries and other activities deemed not urgent in mid-March to prepare for a possible surge of COVID-19 patients.

That directive was lifted in late May and hospitals gradually resumed performing those surgeries.

The study says that between March 15 and June 13, Ontario hospitals accrued a backlog of 148,364 procedures.

Its authors say the data will play an important role in health planning moving forward, and the modelling framework can be adapted to other jurisdictions.

"The magnitude of the surgical backlog from COVID-19 raises important implications for planning for the recovery phase and for possible second waves of the pandemic in Ontario," study co-author Dr. Jonathan Irish, a surgeon at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre in Toronto, said in a statement.

The researchers say health systems "cannot go back to business as usual" if they want to manage the impact on patients, and must find innovative solutions to prepare for future waves of the novel coronavirus.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Scientists get closer to blood test for Alzheimer's disease

Scientists get closer to blood test for Alzheimer's disease
An experimental blood test was highly accurate at distinguishing people with Alzheimer’s disease from those without it in several studies, boosting hopes that there soon may be a simple way to help diagnose this most common form of dementia.

Scientists get closer to blood test for Alzheimer's disease

COVID-19 recovery can take a few weeks even for young adults

COVID-19 recovery can take a few weeks even for young adults
Recovering from even mild coronavirus infections can take at least two to three weeks, according to U.S. research published Friday.

COVID-19 recovery can take a few weeks even for young adults

WATCH: Your help needed, A Mother's Plea to Help Baby Aryan Fight SMA #donate #support

WATCH: Your help needed, A Mother's Plea to Help Baby Aryan Fight SMA #donate #support
DO WATCH & PLEASE SHARE AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE! Baby Aryan's parents urge the community to help as the baby was diagnosed with TYPE 1 SPINAL MUSCULAR ATROPHY (SMA). There is a treatment available called ZOLGENSMA which is the most expensive drug in the world at this time it costs 2.1 million dollars USD (2.8 Million CAD).

WATCH: Your help needed, A Mother's Plea to Help Baby Aryan Fight SMA #donate #support

FDA tells doctors to discuss overdose antidote with patients

FDA tells doctors to discuss overdose antidote with patients
Doctors who prescribe opioid painkillers should tell their patients about a potentially life-saving medication that can reverse drug overdoses, according to new federal guidelines issued Thursday.

FDA tells doctors to discuss overdose antidote with patients

Virus antibodies fade fast but not necessarily protection

Virus antibodies fade fast but not necessarily protection
New research suggests that antibodies the immune system makes to fight the new coronavirus may only last a few months in people with mild illness, but that doesn’t mean protection also is gone or that it won’t be possible to develop an effective vaccine.

Virus antibodies fade fast but not necessarily protection

FDA calls for removal of fruity, disposable Puff Bar vapes

FDA calls for removal of fruity, disposable Puff Bar vapes
U.S. health officials are cracking down on a brand of fruity disposable e-cigarettes that is popular with teenagers, saying the company never received permission to sell them in the U.S.

FDA calls for removal of fruity, disposable Puff Bar vapes