'This is my life we're talking about,' says Ontario woman whose cancer surgery's been delayed by Omicron - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:51 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

'This is my life we're talking about,' says Ontario woman whose cancer surgery's been delayed by Omicron

Thousands of patients across the province have had their medical procedures put on hold amid rising cases of COVID-19. One of those patients, Cassandra Di Maria, is calling on the government to rethink the decision, saying the move is punishing people like her whose lives are at risk.

Province putting thousands of 'non-urgent' medical procedures on pause to preserve hospital capacity

Cassandra Di Maria says a major cancer operation that had been delayed indefinitely due to COVID-19 has been rescheduled for Jan. 26 following the intervention of a patient advocate. (Submitted by Cassandra Di Maria)

Last week, Cassandra Di Maria got an email no cancer patient ever wants to receive.

In it, a member of her surgeon's team informed her that a major surgery she had scheduled for Jan. 19 at Toronto's Mount Sinai hospital was being cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. No replacement date was set.

The email came after the Ontario government announced on Jan. 3 that non-urgent medical procedures would be put on holdfor the third time since March 2020, while the province deals with a surge in cases of the highly-infectious Omicron variant.

"It's very frustrating because this is my life we're talking about," said Di Maria,30."I just want to be able to have my surgery completed and go into recovery and put this all behind me."

The Vaughan, Ont., resident is one of thousands of patients across the province who have had surgeries or procedures postponed or cancelled in a bid to prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed byrecord-high numbers of COVID-19 patients andstaffshortages.

Now, Di Maria is calling on the government to rethink the decision to cancel cancer surgeries, saying the move is punishing non-COVID-19 patients whose lives are at risk.

"We all deserve to be treated for what we need to be treated for," she said.

3rd postponement

Diagnosed with stage four colon cancer in November 2020, Di Mariaunderwent surgery and began chemotherapy last January. She stoppedchemo in October after 17 cycles so her immune system could recover in preparation for another major surgery to remove spots on her liver, abdomen and one of her ovaries.

That surgery, originally supposed to happen inNovember, had already beenpostponed twice before it was cancelled last week.

Di Maria is concerned that being off chemotherapy for months has left her vulnerable.

"Having it postponed and cancelled so many times ...I'm worried, obviously, the cancer has gotten the chance to now spread further," she said.

Di Maria's cousin Vanessa Pilieci posted this message on Instagram to draw attention to her situation. (Vanessa Pilieci/Instagram)

Ontario Health,the agency thatoversees the province's health system, said Thursday it couldn't confirm the number ofsurgeries that had been cancelled so far this year. But when the pause was announced on Jan. 3, Ontario Health CEO Matt Anderson said it would affect between8,000 and 10,000 procedures a week.

"It was a tough decision, a big cost, but something that is necessary given what we're seeing in the [COVID-19]numbers," Anderson said at the time.

The cancellations of non-urgent procedures in previous waves of the pandemic led to an estimated backlog of 15.9 million surgeries, diagnostic exams, screenings and other medical procedures, the Ontario Medical Association said in June 2021.

Ontario Health and the Ontario Hospital Association both declinedrequests for an interview.

'It breaks my heart'

Dr. Fayez Quereshy, clinical vice-president and a surgical oncologist at Toronto's University Health Network (UHN), said hospitals are facing "unprecedented" staffing shortages as health-care workers and support staff get sick with COVID-19 or have to self-isolate.

While Di Maria's surgery was scheduled at a different hospital network,Quereshysaid he had to call a cancer patient of his own on Tuesday to tell them that their procedure was being delayed.

"It breaks my heart to hear that story because, obviously, we want to put our patients at the front and centre," Quereshy said."Unfortunately, we're making these calls far too often."

Dr. Fayez Quereshy, clinical vice-president and a surgical oncologist at the University Health Network, says Ontario hospitals are facing 'unprecedented' staff shortages at the same time as beds fill up with COVID-19 patients. (Rosa Kim/UHN)

Quereshy said UHN is making it a priority to treatthe patients experiencingsymptoms that require urgent attention.Procedures that can be safely deferred or delayed are being rescheduled, he said, to create capacity amid surging demand for health care.

"Thespike that we're seeing almost all of a sudden and with very little notice is unlike anything that we've seen before,"Quereshysaid.

On Wednesday, the province announced it would deploy internationally trained nurses to hospitals and some long-term care homes strained by staffing shortages.

Meanwhile, Di Maria still doesn't know when it will be her turn.

"I'm just waiting for a confirmed surgery date, or a confirmed 'No, it's not even going to happen,' so I can get back on chemo. Something," she said.

With files from Natalie Kalata