N.L. averaged 1,400 fewer surgeries per month from onset of pandemic through June: study - Action News
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N.L. averaged 1,400 fewer surgeries per month from onset of pandemic through June: study

New research on the impacts of COVID-19 has found aprofound effect on hospital services in Newfoundland and Labrador during the pandemic.

Canadian Institute for Health Information says biggest decreases were in the first months of the pandemic

Tens of thousands of surgeries have been delayed in Newfoundland and Labrador since the onset the COVID-19 pandemic. (CBC)

New research on the impacts of COVID-19 has founda profound effect on hospital services in Newfoundland and Labrador during the pandemic.

The Canadian Institute for Health Information says nearly 1,400 fewer surgeries were performed per month across the province during the first 16 months of the pandemic, from March 2020 to June of this year.

"There were about 22,000 less surgeries in Newfoundland compared to the year before," Tracy Johnson, director of health system analyticsat CIHI, told CBC News.

According to the institute, April 2020 saw the biggestdrop about 83 per cent in total surgeriesin Newfoundland and Labrador compared with April 2019, including about 53 per centfewer cardiac surgeries, 47 per centfewer cancer surgeries and 90 per centfewer hip and knee replacements.

Just 900 surgeries were performed in Newfoundland and Labrador in April 2020, compared with more than 5,200 in the same month one year earlier.

"If you have been waiting awhile for a hip or knee replacement, one can imagine that it affects your quality of life and your functioning," said Johnson.

Not all delayed surgeries were scheduled procedures said Johnson; there was also a drop in demand for trauma surgerieswhen workplaces closed and people worked from home. During those slowdowns there were fewer cars on the roads and less need for emergency surgery followingaccidents.

Tracy Johnson of the Canadian Institute for Health Information says more research needs to be done on the effect of delayed surgeries on patients. (CBC)

The research also found surgeries rebounded closer to 2019 numbers quickly by July 2020, when about 4,000 surgeries were performed, compared with about 4,500 in July 2019.

The total number of surgeries dipped again this year when there were outbreaks of COVID-19 in February 2021 and again in June when COVID-19case numbers rose.

Johnson couldn't say whether Newfoundland and Labrador is catching up with the backlog of delayed surgeries.

"Different provinces have had different strategies for catching up," she said.

"The challenges around catching up are finding operating room time and finding enough nurses and surgeons to do the surgeries. These folks have been running flat-out for a year and a half with COVID."

Johnson also saidmore research is needed to measure what the delays have meant to patients.

"Do we see people coming with more severe cardiac disease because it was missed early on? Or other challenges like cancers that are at a later stage? And at the moment we can't answer those questions," she said.

Health Minister John Haggie revealed at least one effect of the delays in October, when he noted that eight people in the province had died in the previous year waiting for heart surgery double the average annual total of four.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador