- Honesty about estimated wait times in Canada could alert some patients to dangerous situations and pursue lifesaving treatment abroad
CALGARY, AB: Think tank SecondStreet.org released a new report today that shows provincial governments are lacking when it comes to providing information to patients who are waiting for lifesaving treatment. Almost all provinces do not require patients to be told their estimated wait time and maximum recommended wait time, putting lives at risk.
“We’ve seen cases in Canada where health staff helped save a life by being honest about the unsafe surgical wait times as well as a case where a patient’s life was taken because the system wasn’t transparent,” said SecondStreet.org Research Director Bacchus Barua. “Passing Debbie’s Law in Canada would increase transparency and save lives – all parties should be able to support it.”
This research was inspired by Manitoba patient Debbie Fewster’s story. She was told she required surgery within three weeks, but died after waiting more than two months. Her family noted they would have sought treatment outside the province had they known their mother’s life was at risk on a waiting list. SecondStreet.org, along with Debbie’s family, proposed Debbie’s Law in 2025 to require transparency around wait times for life-saving treatment.
After filing Freedom of Information requests nationwide, and reviewing guidelines identified by provinces, findings from this research include:
- No province has proper transparency rules in place to ensure patients know if long waiting lists are putting their lives at risk. Most provinces have no requirements at all.
- British Columbia has some requirements in place to notify patients of their estimated wait time within two weeks of joining a waiting list. However, this long period can rob patients of valuable time if they need surgery urgently.
- Saskatchewan does not require providers to inform patients about the estimated wait but suggests “long-waiting” patients should be contacted every three months by the booking office (although there is no explicit requirement).
- Manitoba does not appear to have made any changes almost a year after Debbie Fewster’s story was brought to light, despite promises to implement a directive.
SecondStreet.org previously shared B.C. patient Melanie Leeson’s story to highlight the life-saving power of medical transparency. Facing an aggressive cancer diagnosis, and a backlogged provincial system, Leeson was told by four different medical professionals that her best hope lay outside of Canada – she is a survivor, but had to leave home to become one.
“I appreciate that the medical staff I spoke with were brave enough to be honest with me, even when the system discouraged it,” said Leeson. “Their private advice to seek treatment abroad is the reason I am alive today. We need a system where transparency is the standard, not a secret whispered in a hallway.”
To view SecondStreet.org’s new report – click here.
To view the Freedom of Information responses from each province – see below.
British Columbia – click here and here
Saskatchewan – click here
Manitoba – click here and here
Quebec – click here
Nova Scotia – click here
New Brunswick – click here and here