Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. reduces most of COVID backlog in surgeries

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2021 09:31 PM
  • B.C. reduces most of COVID backlog in surgeries

British Columbia's health minister says 90 per cent of patients who had their surgery postponed during the first wave of the pandemic have now had their procedures.

Adrian Dix says operating-room hours were added to clear a backlog of surgeries that were cancelled in mid-March to ensure beds were saved for patients with COVID-19.

Non-urgent surgeries resumed two months later, and Dix says more surgeons, anesthesiologists and nurses have been hired.

The minister says significantly more surgeries were done over the holiday period compared with the previous year, but outbreaks of COVID-19 at hospitals in North Vancouver, Prince George and Burnaby reduced the number of surgeries that could be performed.

 

PICS early educator course

He says by the third week of November, all health authorities had called more than 111,000 patients on wait-lists to ask if they were ready to reschedule their surgeries.

Dix says COVID-19 vaccinations are a priority in reducing outbreaks, but the challenge is getting more doses as the province expects to immunize about 10 per cent of the population by March.

"I wish it were 40 per cent, but it's 10 per cent."

Michael Marchbank, former CEO of Fraser Health and consultant to the Health Ministry, said in March the backlog could be cleared in 15 months, but the ministry now says that could take 22 months.

"What we have seen so far includes extending days in 11 operating rooms, adding weekends in four operating rooms, opening 23 new or unused operating rooms, maximizing our capacity in our non-contracted sites and achieving a 37 per cent reduction in summer slowdowns," he says.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

NDP to put wealth tax on Commons agenda: Singh

NDP to put wealth tax on Commons agenda: Singh
Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, Singh says people are worried about the cost of the pandemic because they don't want to carry the burden of increasing public debt.

NDP to put wealth tax on Commons agenda: Singh

WATCH: Trump Declares Victory | Biden Calls For Faith USElections 2020

WATCH: Trump Declares Victory | Biden Calls For Faith USElections 2020
President Donald Trump declares victory in the election even though ballots are still to be counted. It wasn’t immediately clear what Trump meant, as states including Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia and others are counting legally cast votes.

WATCH: Trump Declares Victory | Biden Calls For Faith USElections 2020

Severe COVID cases may continue to rise: Tam

Severe COVID cases may continue to rise: Tam
Dr. Theresa Tam says hospitalizations and deaths tend to lag behind new cases by one or more weeks, raising concerns that Canada has yet to see the full extent of impacts associated with increasing COVID-19 transmission in many parts of the country.

Severe COVID cases may continue to rise: Tam

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote
As results trickled in from those key states on Wednesday, anxious expat Americans from those states watched the ongoing count with at least some degree of satisfaction.

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver
A notice on the BC Hydro website blamed a transmission circuit failure for the problem.

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger
The U.S. presidential race remains too close to call, with millions of votes still being counted in battleground states including Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia and North Carolina.

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger