Overcrowding at Ontario hospitals has become so serious that the sector is âon the brinkâ of a âcrisis,â warns its umbrella organization, using uncharacteristically alarming language.Leaders from the Ontario Hospital Association (OHA) plan to go to Queenâs Park to plead their case for more funding on Thursday. They are seeking a 4.55 per cent increase in operating funding for 2018-19, according to their prebudget submission, an advanced copy of which has been obtained by the Star.That amounts to an extra $815 million and would bring the sectorâs total operating allocation for the next fiscal year to about $18.8 billion.Read more:Far too many hospital beds occupied by patients who donât need to be there: reportHospitals getting more beds, more fundingOntario health system headed for âcrisisâ with overcrowded hospitalsâThe sector is heaving under enormous pressure right now,â said OHA president Anthony Dale. âHospitals really need significant investment next year to maintain access to existing levels of services.âThe organizationâs submission to the provinceâs finance committee is titled âA Sector on the Brink: The Case for a Significant investment in Ontarioâs Hospitals.â It states that patient occupancy at about half of the provinceâs 143 hospital corporations exceeded 100 per cent this past summer, normally a slower time of year for the sector. Occupancy at some hospitals was as high as 140 per cent while the international standard for safe occupancy is 85 per cent.A section of the seven-page submission highlights the âwarning signs of an imminent capacity crisis.â Among them: growing wait times, higher emergency department volumes, and infrastructure and equipment that is ârun down, at the end of their life, or outdated.âStates the document: âEmergency departments, for example, are a critical barometer for how the heal ...
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