{"id":56440,"date":"2020-03-12T09:31:50","date_gmt":"2020-03-12T13:31:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/mileniostadium.com\/?p=56440"},"modified":"2020-03-12T09:31:50","modified_gmt":"2020-03-12T13:31:50","slug":"ontarios-hospital-logjam-brings-record-wait-times-before-arrival-of-covid-19","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mileniostadium.com\/local\/gta\/ontarios-hospital-logjam-brings-record-wait-times-before-arrival-of-covid-19\/","title":{"rendered":"Ontario’s hospital logjam brings record wait times, before arrival of COVID-19"},"content":{"rendered":"

As Ontario hospitals prepare for the coronavirus pandemic, new figures show patients in this province are facing a record wait time for beds.<\/p>\n

New\u00a0statistics\u00a0from the Ministry of Health show the\u00a0average patient admitted to hospital in January spent 18.3 hours in the emergency room until a bed became available on a ward. That matches the previous monthly record wait time, in January 2019.<\/p>\n

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The news comes as Ontario plans for a possible surge in patients in case the COVID-19 pandemic leads to widespread transmission of the novel coronavirus in the province.<\/p>\n

Health Minister Christine Elliott insisted Wednesday that the province’s hospitals will be able to manage the pandemic.<\/p>\n

“Our hospitals are absolutely ready to deal with this,” Elliott told a news conference at Queen’s Park.<\/p>\n

“If there is a surge in patients, then there are arrangements being made with all our hospitals,” Elliott said. “One hospital in particular may be the one that will receive patients who have COVID-19, allowing the other hospitals to take up the work that was normally done.”<\/p>\n

But with\u00a0evidence revealed by CBC News showing that many Ontario\u00a0hospitals are routinely running at and above maximum capacity, some in the health system question how the province can cope with a fresh influx of patients.<\/p>\n

“The province’s acute care system is already straining to contain “normal” volumes, and the impending pandemic could bring it to the brink of collapse,”\u00a0wrote\u00a0Dr. Richard Osborne, a hospital physician in Toronto and Mississauga, in the Toronto Star on Wednesday.<\/p>\n

“In the absence of makeshift tent hospitals and the cancellation of all non-urgent admissions and surgeries, a coronavirus pandemic risks exhausting our system’s bed capacity within weeks,” added Osborne.<\/p>\n

Meanwhile in Ontario:<\/p>\n