Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

COVID disrupted needed health care: survey

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2021 04:16 PM
  • COVID disrupted needed health care: survey

About half of Canadians in need of health care had difficulty accessing services during the first year of the COVID-19 crisis, a new report by Statistics Canada suggests, and one expert warns such disruptions could pose serious medical problems down the line.

The findings released Tuesday are based on the responses of 25,268 adults in 10 provinces — including 6,517 Indigenous individuals — to a survey last spring about the pandemic's impacts on health care.

The data showed 49 per cent of respondents with medical needs reported difficultyaccessing care between March 2020 and May 2021.

Nearly one in 10 participants who needed health care services reported that they couldn't book at least one appointment, and 28 per cent said scheduled services were cancelled, moved or delayed.

Statistics Canada noted that 85 per cent of respondents said they got the health care they needed in spite of these hurdles, while the remaining 15 per cent did not receive at least one required service, such as a consultation with a specialist or an appointment with a family doctor.

Four out of five people who experienced difficulties accessing care indicated that it negatively impacted their life. Among those affected, 20 per cent reported that their condition worsened and their overall health deteriorated.

The survey also found 30 per cent of participants with health concerns said they put off seeking medical attention, with COVID-19 concerns ranking among the top reasons for delays.

Gregory Marchildon, a health policy professor at University of Toronto, said the fallout of these pandemic-related gaps in care should become evident in years to come.

Marchildon said some patients may suffer irreversible damage because of delayed diagnoses, predicting a rise in late-stage cancers and complications from chronic illnesses.

"It will inevitably have an impact," he said. "There are bound to be some serious issues that will crop up later."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

CMHC to create more green housing programs

CMHC to create more green housing programs
While the agency does have decent measures for energy efficiency and overall energy performance of a building, he says there are other variables in assessing a home's environmental sustainability that have yet to be scoped.

CMHC to create more green housing programs

Canada ranks sixth in global drug policy index

Canada ranks sixth in global drug policy index
The majority of the 30 countries included in the study received failing grades, with a median score of 48 out of 100. Canada hit 56 out of 100, with a lot of points deducted for how its drug policies disproportionately target racialized people.

Canada ranks sixth in global drug policy index

Record toxic illicit drug deaths in B.C.: coroner

Record toxic illicit drug deaths in B.C.: coroner
The BC Coroners Service says 181 people died in August and 152 in September, record figures for both months, and it brings the number of fatalities since the start of the year to 1,534.

Record toxic illicit drug deaths in B.C.: coroner

VPD arrests alleged thief within days of jail release

VPD arrests alleged thief within days of jail release
Officers in the West End re-arrested the 44-year-old thief Monday night, after he allegedly stole more than $730 in cosmetics from a department store on Robson Street. The man – who has 103 prior criminal convictions, including 38 for theft – was one of nine people arrested Monday as VPD continues to clampdown on shoplifters in the downtown core.

VPD arrests alleged thief within days of jail release

Baby found safe after being abducted in stolen vehicle

Baby found safe after being abducted in stolen vehicle
At 9:20 a.m., a bystander located the vehicle abandoned with the baby still inside the vehicle in the 5900-block of 177B Street.  The baby was checked over by BC Emergency Health Services and was not physically injured. The family involved has been provided support through victim services.

Baby found safe after being abducted in stolen vehicle

VPD arrests three after gun brandished in ice-cream robbery

VPD arrests three after gun brandished in ice-cream robbery
The crime occurred around 9 p.m. Monday night, after a 40-year-old man tried to steal three tubs of ice cream worth just $21. When grocery store staff tried to stop the thief, two accomplices approached and flashed a gun, allowing the thief to run away.

VPD arrests three after gun brandished in ice-cream robbery