Interior Health (B.C.) Sees Rise in Waiting List Deaths

- Nearly 1,600 patients died waiting for health care in 2024-25 fiscal year
New government data released today by SecondStreet.org shows that nearly 1,600 patients died waiting for health care in British Columbia’s Interior Health region over the past year. This marks a six-year high for waitlist deaths in the region, which includes Kelowna.
A minority of patients, 222, died on surgical waitlists, while the remaining 1,364 died before even receiving diagnostic scans. The health services patients were waiting for when they died include a wide variety: everything from cataract surgery to CT scans. Kelowna patient Joan Hama has previously spoken out about how she nearly died while waiting for a colonoscopy.
“It’s been six years, and waitlist deaths are still getting worse in and around Kelowna,” said SecondStreet.org Communications Director Dom Lucyk. “This is a failure of the health care system, plain and simple. If we don’t see health reform, it’s only going to continue to get worse.”
These new numbers come as Kelowna deals with a disastrous shutdown of the pediatric unit at Kelowna General Hospital, which led to the resignation of CEO Susan Brown and has spawned horrific stories, such as a three-year-old boy being given fentanyl for pain management during a long wait for surgery.
“Stories like the pediatric unit shutdown demonstrate just how bad things can get in Canadian health care,” added Lucyk. “These waitlist death numbers show that the system overall is sick and needs to be fixed.”
To see the full freedom of information data from Interior Health ‒ click here and here.
To learn more about health reform ‒ click here.
You can help us continue to research and tell stories about this issue by making a donation or sharing this content with your friends. Be sure to sign up for our updates too!