Montreal Heart Institute to reduce wait list
Last Updated: Thursday, March 11, 2010 | 8:49 PM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
A cardiac surgeon at the Montreal Heart Institute says his hospital has adopted measures to get its wait list under control within six months.
Dr. Michel Carrier made his comments Thursday amid recent concerns over wait times after 65-year-old Jean-Guy Pitre died last week while waiting for heart surgery.
Pitre died after waiting more than five months for the operation to repair a blocked aorta, which was to take place at Montreal's Hôtel Dieu Hospital.
Officials at the University of Montreal Health Centre (CHUM), said it was forced to postpone Pitre's surgery because of a lack of beds in the intensive care unit.
While Pitre was not treated at the heart institute, patients there started to worry after his children when public with their father's story, said Dr. Carrier.
"We have more phone calls at the office. [We are] trying to reassure them," said Carrier.
Measures include the recent re-opening of a fourth operating room, which was closed for renovations last year, he said.
In addition, Carrier said the hospital has managed to keep more than three-quarters of the nurses it hired over the past few years, which will also help all patients to be seen within six months.
The hospital's head of medicine, Dr. Normand Racine, says the high retention rate is because of a series of new measures, including flexible work hours, an end to mandatory overtime, and smaller nursing units.
But Carrier cautioned that wait lists will never go away completely.
"One hundred patients, maybe 80 patients, that's the minimum we should go. We shouldn't go to zero. Zero means we have an open facility, unused. That would be ridiculous," he said.
The Heart Institute — which currently has a wait list of 217 patients — carries out more than one-quarter of all heart surgeries on the island of Montreal.
Meanwhile, amid the current controversy over wait times, there are reports that Quebec's director of emergency services has resigned.
The province asked Dr. Pierre Savard in June 2008 to lead a group asked to come up with ways to reduce wait times for emergency services.
According to La Presse, Health Minister Yves Bolduc would say only that Savard resigned because he wanted to return to his medical practice.
A spokeswoman for the minister's office said Savard's contract ends March 31 and he has told the minister that he does not want to renew it, the paper reported.
Share Tools
Latest Montreal News Headlines
- Tornado touchdown confirmed near Montreal
- Trees were uprooted, roofs damaged and windows shattered as severe thunderstorms and a tornado rattled through southwestern Quebec Friday night. more »
- Champlain Bridge road work blitz this weekend
- Transport Quebec is advising drivers to avoid the Champlain Bridge corridor this weekend as a blitz of major road work closes down some lanes. more »
- Quebec students ready for tuition hike, says one leader
- The president of Quebec's College Student Federation (FECQ), Leo Bureau-Blouin, tells CBC Radio's The House that students "are ready for a compromise on the amount of a tuition hike," as the Quebec government and the province's student associations prepare to resume talks. more »
- IOC's Jacques Rogge encourages Olympic bids for Quebec City, Toronto
- International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge believes there is an opportunity for either Quebec City or Toronto to host a future Olympic Games. more »
Top News Headlines
- Teen struck by lightning in Ottawa dies
- The victim of a Friday lightning strike during a storm in east Ottawa has died, CBC News has learned. more »
- 32 Syrian children die in artillery attack, says UN
- More than 90 people have been killed by regime forces in a district of central Syria, with the head of the UN team in the country confirming at least 32 children and 60 adults were killed the attack. more »
- Missing Winnipeg children found in Mexico, organization says
- Two Winnipeg children reported missing and possibly in Mexico have been found alive, according to unofficial reports from an agency that works to find missing people. more »
- Everest team unable to bring down Toronto woman's body
- Bad weather has hampered the recovery team that is attempting to bring down the body of a Toronto woman who died trying to climb Mt. Everest. more »
Most Viewed/Commented
- Tornado touchdown confirmed near Montreal
- 32nd night protest in Montreal
- Quebec students challenge Bill 78 in court
- Quebec students ready for tuition hike, says one leader
- Mysterious photos may shed light on 2004 Quebec homicide
- Son testifies on behalf of father accused of killing wife
- Quebec faces mounting pressure amid student crisis
- Ottawa man in hospital after lightning strike
- Bookies set odds on Quebec student protest

