CBCnews

Flu overload cancels Ottawa surgeries

'We're stretched to the max,' says one doctor

Last Updated: Tuesday, November 10, 2009 | 12:54 PM ET

The Ottawa Hospital has been forced to cancel 112 surgeries originally scheduled between Oct. 28 and Nov. 6, said CEO Dr. Jack Kitts.The Ottawa Hospital has been forced to cancel 112 surgeries originally scheduled between Oct. 28 and Nov. 6, said CEO Dr. Jack Kitts. (Simon Gardner/CBC)More than 100 surgeries have been cancelled at the Ottawa Hospital as swine flu patients flood emergency rooms and fill hospital beds.

"We are postponing people who really need to be done, and that's not something we take lightly, and it is not something we want to do," said Dr. Jack Kitts, CEO of the Ottawa Hospital.

The hospital has been forced to cancel 112 surgeries originally scheduled for between Oct. 28 and Nov. 6. They include operations that are considered less time-sensitive, such as shoulder repairs, knee and hip replacements and hernia operations.

Kitts said since swine flu started spreading this fall, emergency room visits have jumped 40 per cent. But what has really stretched resources at the hospital, which is almost always operating at or near full capacity, is that close to 40 people were in hospital Monday with problems related to swine flu.

Dr. Joseph Mamazza, the hospital's head of general surgery, had to call three patients to cancel gastrointestinal surgeries last week.

"It's very difficult for me to have to pick up the phone and call patients and say, 'Listen, we're stretched to the max. We have no beds, and we have to reschedule you,'" he said.

Burden on family

In many cases, patients have to make costly arrangements to come in for surgery or have arranged for relatives to help them, Mamazza said.

"So, it puts quite a burden on the family itself," he said.

And many patients have already waited a very long time for their surgeries, Kitts said.

"By the time these patients have waited several months to get here, they're often in a lot of pain and have developed other illnesses," he said.

The hospital is trying to give patients another operation date within a few weeks, and Kitts said staff are determined not to cancel a patient's surgery more than once.

Shorter lines at vaccine clinics

Meanwhile, Ottawa Public Health continued to hand out wristband passes for priority groups to get vaccinations later in the day. By mid-morning Tuesday, lines appeared to be much shorter at the city's vaccination clinics and many had hundreds of wristbands left to give away.

As of 11:15 a.m., the Fred Barrett Arena clinic reported having 250 wristbands left, the Orléans Client Service Centre had 750 and the Tom Brown Arena had 800. There was no word on the number of wristbands available at the Vanier-Richelieu clinic or the clinic at 100 Constellation Cres., which will run from 2:30 to 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

  •  
 

Video

    Swine flu

    Ready or not
    Hygiene lessons to prevent school spread
    Swine flu: FAQs
    The vaccine: the road to rollout
    How it's unfolding: a timeline
    Timeline: key dates in the development of H1N1 vaccine
    Isolating the ill: when to quarantine
    MAP: Tracking H1N1 across Canada
    Investigating swine flu: WHO's pandemic alert levels
    Did pandemic-watchers miss the signs online?
    Swine flu roots traced to Spanish flu
    Will face masks protect you from the flu?
    Inside CBC News: We are not renaming swine flu

    In Depth

    7 things you should know about swine flu
    How swine flu is changing some behaviours
    Pandemic preparation: dealing with infectious disease outbreaks
    What is a virus?
    How viruses mutate
    Misconceptions about the flu
    Tips for building your immune system
    Fighting the flu
    The 1918 flu epidemic
    CBC Archives: Influenza - Battling the last great virus
    CBC Archives: The swine flu fiasco

    Stories

    Flu shot plans vary across Canada
    (Sept. 25, 2009)
    Swine flu raises questions about sick leave policies
    (Sept. 25, 2009)
    Seasonal flu shot may increase H1N1 risk
    (Sept. 23, 2009)
    Swine flu hits Vancouver and island schools
    (Sept. 23, 2009)
    Swine flu protocol signed for First Nations
    (Sept. 19, 2009)
    Swine flu vaccines to fall short: WHO
    (Sept. 18, 2009)
    H1N1 vaccine in babies worries expert
    (Sept. 17, 2009)
    Swine flu outbreak hits Vancouver Island First Nations
    (Sept. 17, 2009)
    Fears over H1N1 flu rising in NWT community
    (Sept. 17, 2009)
    H1N1 vaccine priority groups released
    Sept. 16, 2009
    H1N1 vaccines get U.S. approval
    Sept. 15, 2009
    1 dose of Canada's H1N1 shot protects adults: company
    Sept. 14, 2009
    Address swine flu vaccine fears, doctor urges
    Sept. 11, 2009
    Vaccinate kids early to fight swine flu
    Sept. 10, 2009
    H1N1 infects cells deep in lungs
    Sept. 10, 2009
    Swine flu deaths top 2,800 worldwide
    Sept. 4, 2009
    Canada's swine flu vaccine coming in October
    Sept. 3, 2009
    Swine flu vaccine on schedule: health minister
    Sept. 2, 2009
    Flu vaccine plan will be too slow: CMAJ
    August 31, 2009
    Feds, First Nations leaders at odds on swine flu preparations
    August 29, 2009
    Swine flu vaccine funding boosted
    August 27, 2009
    Swine flu 'czar' needed: CMA Journal
    August 17, 2009
    Canada to order 50.4 million H1N1 vaccine doses
    August 6, 2009
    Universities brace for fall swine flu wave
    July 30, 2009
    Canadian swine flu vaccine set for October
    July 17, 2009
    Alcohol-based sanitizers for flu-hit First Nations delayed over substance abuse fears
    June 23, 2009
    WHO declares swine flu pandemic, no change in Canada's approach
    June 11, 2009
    Swine flu epidemic in decline: Mexico
    May 3, 2009
    No sustained spread of swine flu virus outside North America: WHO
    May 2, 2009
    Canada doing all that's needed to respond to swine flu: PM
    April 30, 2009
    WHO boosts pandemic alert level to 5
    April 29, 2009

    Video

    Former patients tell their stories
    What the World of Warcraft video game is teaching pandemic experts
    Swine flu reality check with Dr. Michael Gardam with the Ontario Agency for Health Protection (4:25)
    May 1, 2009

    External Links

    H1N1 Flu Virus surveillance from the Public Health Agency of Canada
    FluWatch animated maps of flu activity, Public Health Agency of Canada
    Influenza A/H1N1 situation updates from the WHO
    H1N1 Flu situation update from Centres for Disease Control

    Health Headlines

    More H1N1 vaccine, ventilators to come Video
    Ontario supplied hospitals with 200 additional ventilators on Friday in anticipation of a surge in swine flu cases.
    Trade show pitches surgical passages to India Video
    Exhibitors at a Toronto trade fair are hoping to add surgery to the list of reasons Canadians travel, but a medical ethicist questions the lack of oversight.
    Weight gain in pregnancy guides updated
    Health Canada is formally replacing its guidelines on weight gain during pregnancy to match new U.S. recommendations.
    Bullying is a public health issue: researcher
    Bullying should be considered a public health problem and governments should adopt national strategies against it, says a Canadian professor who led a study of bullying in 40 countries.
    H1N1 intensifying in Canada but subsiding elsewhere: WHO
    H1N1 appears to have peaked in parts of western Europe and the United States but transmission continues to intensity in Canada, the World Health Organization said Friday.

    People who read this also read …

    Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

    Headlines

    Afghan prisoner transfers halted 'more than one time' Video
    Canadian officials have halted the transfer of prisoners to Afghanistan's intelligence service "more than one time," because of the possibility of torture, Canada's chief of defence staff said Sunday.
    Indonesian ferry sinks in storm
    Rescuers saved more than 240 people aboard an Indonesian passenger ferry that sank Sunday in rough waters off Sumatra island, but at least 25 people have died, officials said.
    Iranian forces practise defending nuke sites
    Iran on Sunday began large-scale air defence war games aimed at protecting the country's nuclear facilities against any possible attack, state television reported.
    Baby survives as crash kills 4
    RCMP say four Calgary women are dead after a crash south of Calgary that left only a single survivor —a baby that had been strapped into a car seat.
    Plaskett double winner at Canadian Folk Music Awards
    Joel Plaskett's triple album Three earned the Halifax singer-songwriter a double win at the Canadian Folk Music Awards on Saturday.