Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Study Says Long ER Wait Times Due To Diagnostic Tests, Not Lack Of Beds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Mar, 2017 10:46 AM
    WINNIPEG — A study says diagnostic testing, not the number of beds available, is the biggest reason for long waits in Manitoba emergency rooms.
     
    The Manitoba Centre for Health Policy at the University of Manitoba study says all the tests required for patients affects how long it takes to get people through emergency departments.
     
    More than half of patients admitted to the ER need tests such as a CT scan, X-ray or urine test.
     
    The study says the time it takes for doctors to decide on which tests are needed, order them, get the tests done and interpret the results is why there are such long waits.
     
    Lead study author Dr. Malcolm Doupe says solving the problem will take more than just adding more space in hospitals.
     
    Doupe says it will be up to medical professionals to find solutions.
     
    “Our entire health-care system, I think, is trying to grapple with what does reform mean. Is it more of the same or doing somethings differently? There’s lots of examples why, and this is a great one, doing things differently is the way to go.”
     
    Doupe says it will be up to medical professionals to find solutions.
     
    Dr. Alecs Chochinov, head of the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority’s emergency program, says there's been a major shift towards more testing in the last few decades.
     
    “If you came in with appendicitis 30 years ago, you would go to the OR, they would open you up, 20 per cent of cases would be needed and we accepted that,” he says.
     
    “With the advent of CT scans, everybody needs a CT scan — is that bad? No. It’s the standard of care now but I think we have to accept those type of things necessarily lead to delays.”
     
    Chochinov said there could be changes to standards for testing and work could be done to streamline the process.
     
    "A previous review of our health-care system, ordered by the old NDP government, argued we may not need six fully acute emergency departments. Some could be converted to deal with patients suffering from less serious conditions. That would allow the remaining emergency departments to have the best possible testing equipment. "
     
    The study found an average of 612 people go to emergency rooms in Winnipeg every day, according to 2013 data, the latest available.
     
    The average ER wait time, according to the data,was roughly five hours.
     
    The study found that only about one per cent of people visiting the ER are dealing with “very high urgency” conditions. More than 80 per cent of those who show up are not dealing with life or death situations.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'It's Wrong On All Levels': Canadians Affected By Trump's Travel Ban Speak Out

    'It's Wrong On All Levels': Canadians Affected By Trump's Travel Ban Speak Out
      But this week, the 35-year-old financial manager found herself struggling to explain to her young kids why U.S. President Donald Trump wants to temporarily ban people born in Iraq from crossing the border.

    'It's Wrong On All Levels': Canadians Affected By Trump's Travel Ban Speak Out

    U.S. Government Makes It Official: Canadian Passport-Holders Excused From Ban

    U.S. Government Makes It Official: Canadian Passport-Holders Excused From Ban
    The U.S. government has provided some clarity: Canadian passport-holders have the right to travel to the United States, despite days of confusing, contradictory messages about Donald Trump's travel restrictions.

    U.S. Government Makes It Official: Canadian Passport-Holders Excused From Ban

    Details, Timeline For Changes To B.C. Foreign Homebuyers Tax Unclear

    Details, Timeline For Changes To B.C. Foreign Homebuyers Tax Unclear
    VANCOUVER — A man who lost thousands of dollars when British Columbia introduced a tax on foreigners buying homes says tweaks to the policy are a good step forward but the harm has already been done to his family.

    Details, Timeline For Changes To B.C. Foreign Homebuyers Tax Unclear

    Quebec Massacre Suspect Alexandre Bissonnette, 27, A Fan Of Trump, Far Right French Politician

    Quebec Massacre Suspect Alexandre Bissonnette, 27, A Fan Of Trump, Far Right French Politician
    A handcuffed Alexandre Bissonnette, 27, made a brief court appearance Monday at which he was arraigned on six counts of first-degree murder and five of attempted murder. 

    Quebec Massacre Suspect Alexandre Bissonnette, 27, A Fan Of Trump, Far Right French Politician

    One Dead In Shooting Near Toronto College; Weapons Recovered

    One Dead In Shooting Near Toronto College; Weapons Recovered
    A witness says he heard a flurry of gunfire near a downtown Toronto college in an incident police say left one man dead.

    One Dead In Shooting Near Toronto College; Weapons Recovered

    Death Of Man Found Stabbed In Richmond, B.C., Was Targeted: Police

    Death Of Man Found Stabbed In Richmond, B.C., Was Targeted: Police
    RCMP say 24-year-old Francis Le was found unresponsive in the parking lot of Richmond General Hospital on Friday night.

    Death Of Man Found Stabbed In Richmond, B.C., Was Targeted: Police