‘I thought we were in a third-world country’: Ontario emergency room wait times spike

If you had to go to a hospital emergency room through the holidays, chances are you had a long wait to see a doctor.

CityNews has brought you many stories of overcrowding over the past few years and the latest numbers show it’s getting worse – with more patients coming for treatment, and waiting longer than ever to be treated by a doctor.

Shellann Wallace saw that first-hand when she took her 18-year-old daughter to Humber River Hospital on the Friday evening before Christmas.

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“I couldn’t believe it,” she said. “I thought we were in a third-world country.”

Her daughter was born with a heart condition and was having chest pains, but Wallace said they waited almost seven hours before seeing a doctor.

“I couldn’t believe it,” she said. “I thought we were in a third-world country. I was appalled at what was going on and there was basically nothing to be done. There was only one doctor … he looked helpless.”

“There was basically over 100 people in there,” she explained. “There were people standing, children from a few months old to senior citizens. We were left there just standing and waiting … there were seniors there crying.”

Wallace said frustrations boiled over several times throughout the night and security even had to be called.

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A spokesperson for Humber River told CityNews they have had the highest volume of patients on record. Numbers from the Ministry of Health and Long Term care show several other GTA hospitals are also over capacity, including North York General, Scarborough Health Network, and Mississauga Trillium.

Hospitals are under increasing pressure with more patients arriving for treatment and more staying longer than they should because they are waiting for long-term care beds which have 30,000 people on the wait lists.

According to Health Quality Ontario, a government appointed task force, over the past year patients waiting for alternate care make up the equivalent of 10 large hospitals’ worth of space every single day and emergency room visits are up over 11 per cent over the last six years.

Across the province people spend an average of 16 hours in the emergency room before getting admitted. That’s more than two hours longer than three years ago.

Making matters worse, walk-in and urgent care clinics are often closed when emergency rooms are at their peak.
Of the 21 CityNews reviewed none were open after 8 p.m. and many had limited weekend hours.

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North York General told CityNews it anticipated the increase in volume over the holiday period and took extra measures — as a result they say they did not see higher wait times compared to the rest of the year.

That wasn’t the case at other hospitals in the GTA and across the province. Follow this link to check the average wait times at all Ontario hospitals.

What hospitals are saying about wait times:

University Health Network

 

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Sinai Health System

 

Humber River Hospital

 

North York General Hospital

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Trillium Health Partners

 

SickKids Hospital

 

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