Province to open some hospitals for non-urgent inpatient care as COVID-19 hospitalizations fall

Signs that Ontario is slowly resuming normalcy from the COVID-19 pandemic continued to emerge on Thursday, with the province announcing that some hospitals can begin keeping patients who have undergone non-emergency surgeries overnight if required.

On May 19, the province lifted its halt on non-urgent surgeries and procedures that didn’t require inpatient resources. Now, with COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations dropping, the province will allow inpatient care at hospitals that meet certain criteria.

“Over the past several weeks, we have continued to monitor new cases, hospitalizations, and ICU admissions and are encouraged to see that the recent downward trends have been sustained,” Ontario Health president and CEO, Matthew Anderson, said in a release.

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“Although the number of patients with COVID-19 in hospitals and ICUs in Ontario remains high, some hospitals now have the capacity to safely resume non-emergent and non-urgent surgeries and procedures to include those that require inpatient and critical care resources.”

Hospitals meeting the following criteria may resume all non-emergent and non-urgent surgeries and procedures, including those requiring inpatient and critical care resources:


The province paused all non-emergency surgeries and procedures on April 20 when COVID-19 cases were soaring and the hospital system was dangerously strained.

A CityNews investigation revealed a startling backlog of breast cancer mammograms and surgeries of all types in the province.

The Ontario government has budgeted $300 million in 2021-2022 to help clear that backlog, part of a $600-million multi-year investment.

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