DiscoRodeo
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2020
Talking with family in Ontario (Got out of the province a few years back when covid started, because I was not going through another lockdown).
Was commenting on the new NYC approach to rounding up the homeless for forced hospital stays, and my mom just goes "They cant do that, they dont have beds"
>What
Turns out that, at least in a lot of South-Western Ontario, hospitals are short on beds, in addition to staff now. For a lot of long term care patients, theyre trying to ship them up north because they lack the beds and staff for them. If long term care patients refuse (because, of course, if youre going to be in the hospital for a long time you want to be near your family and not shipped off somewhere like Thunder Bay) you can get charged up to $400 a night for refusing to get shipped out.
Wanted to confirm this with a relative of mine working in healthcare, and apparently its even worse. Tylenol is hard to get on the shelves and some doctors are giving perscriptions. New hospital hires are mostly people in their late 20s, early 30s, with most of the old staff retiring or getting out during the pandemic. Super low availability of beds. Emails begging people to volunteer for extra shifts, even for double pay, etc. Thats on top of surgeries being delayed for half a year to the majority of a year as well.
It really seems like things are going bad, and we honestly may be facing a health care collapse.
Not saying that its just the pandemic that's causing this.

Bill 124's freezing of hiring and wages of public sector workers (before the pandemic) is a big contributor towards this in Ontario, imo
But its just, seems like the perfect storm hit Canadian healthcare. Cuts to the healthcare sector's public funding, freezing wages and hiring (years of burnout besides),
then the pandemic,
and now we're here today.
Might be the actual first part of the state that will fail, as opposed to being "failing". The government is trying to reconcile this with a promised "1% wage increase yearly in healthcare" but it seems like it may genuinely be too little, too late.
Was commenting on the new NYC approach to rounding up the homeless for forced hospital stays, and my mom just goes "They cant do that, they dont have beds"
>What
Turns out that, at least in a lot of South-Western Ontario, hospitals are short on beds, in addition to staff now. For a lot of long term care patients, theyre trying to ship them up north because they lack the beds and staff for them. If long term care patients refuse (because, of course, if youre going to be in the hospital for a long time you want to be near your family and not shipped off somewhere like Thunder Bay) you can get charged up to $400 a night for refusing to get shipped out.
Wanted to confirm this with a relative of mine working in healthcare, and apparently its even worse. Tylenol is hard to get on the shelves and some doctors are giving perscriptions. New hospital hires are mostly people in their late 20s, early 30s, with most of the old staff retiring or getting out during the pandemic. Super low availability of beds. Emails begging people to volunteer for extra shifts, even for double pay, etc. Thats on top of surgeries being delayed for half a year to the majority of a year as well.
It really seems like things are going bad, and we honestly may be facing a health care collapse.
Not saying that its just the pandemic that's causing this.

Bill 124's freezing of hiring and wages of public sector workers (before the pandemic) is a big contributor towards this in Ontario, imo
But its just, seems like the perfect storm hit Canadian healthcare. Cuts to the healthcare sector's public funding, freezing wages and hiring (years of burnout besides),
then the pandemic,
and now we're here today.
Might be the actual first part of the state that will fail, as opposed to being "failing". The government is trying to reconcile this with a promised "1% wage increase yearly in healthcare" but it seems like it may genuinely be too little, too late.
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