big W
Jan 6, 2007, 10:01 PM
We need more of this stuff in across the country. This is one way the money in Alberta can do good for all Canadians. This is a new facility that is set to open in Edmonton. What are some of the facilities across the country.
Aim is to cut wait from 82 weeks to 20
Hospital crunch in Capital Health region forces Royal Alex to cancel five to six joint surgeries a month
Jodie Sinnema, The Edmonton Journal
Published: Saturday, January 06, 2007
EDMONTON - A new $60-million stand-alone orthopedic surgery centre at the Royal Alexandra Hospital will help lower wait times for hip and knee replacements and reduce cancellations of the operations, says Capital Health.
"It will be the first of its kind in Canada," said Joanna Pawlyshyn, vice-president and chief operating officer at the Alex. "It should allow us, in the end, to provide the best access to joint surgery in Canada right here."
Construction on the new 80,000-square-foot facility, funded out of Capital Health's budget -- which will be erected on what is currently a surface parking lot across from the emergency department and south of the Hys Centre -- should begin this spring and be completed in early 2009.
Located at 102nd Street and 110th Avenue and linked by pedway to the hospital, the building will have two operating rooms, 56 beds and about 150 staff. The goal is to have hip and knee patients up on their feet and back home four days after surgery.
The rooms are significantly larger than older ones, providing enough space for physiotherapists to work directly at a person's bedside instead of having patients wheeled to a rehabilitation space.
Capital Health is already rolling out a new system that aims to have 90 per cent of the joint-replacement operations done within 20 weeks of the initial consultation, down from a previous 82 weeks. About 50 per cent of the 3,000 annual joint operations in the region are done that quickly now.
That target should be reached within a year, even before the new building is complete, since operating rooms and beds at the Royal Alexandra, Misericordia and University of Alberta hospitals have been devoted to the program. The new facility will help surgeons maintain that target and see the number of joint surgeries increased to 3,600 a year.
"It will allow us to become super-efficient, to improve the length of stay so we can move patients through more quickly and have them receive better care and be able to move into active lives more quickly," Pawlyshyn said.
"It will provide certainty to the public when they have their procedure booked that it's not going to be bumped because we've got emergencies. We're separating that type of work so that makes it different and unique."
Currently, about five to six joint surgeries have to be cancelled each month because of pressures in the hospital, said Dr. Don Dick, the medical lead of bone and joint health in Edmonton. Every hospital needs more space and more beds to keep up with the growing population.
The orthopedic surgery centre is part of a number of ongoing projects at the Royal Alexandra hospital that includes 14 new laboratories in the newly constructed Lois Hole Hospital, which will focus on women's and children's health issues, as well as a new $3.5-million in vitro fertilization clinic, scheduled to open this spring.
The new orthopedic surgery centre will move at least some of the hip and knee operations out of the main hospitals, freeing up room there to complete other services, Dick said.
In the next year, the administration will have to decide if all joint-replacement surgeries will be done out of the new facility or if some will remain at other hospitals.
In the last year, Capital Health saw a 10-per-cent jump in the number of people needing joint replacements and expects that rate of increase to continue for the next few years, especially with the aging population.
Other orthopedic day surgeries, such as ligament reconstruction and arthroscopy of the knee, will also be performed in the new building to maximize its use. The full load of knee and hip replacements will be phased in over time.
As physicians, we're overjoyed with the new facility," Dick said. "To have a facility where there is real consistency and patients flow through the system in a very standardized manner means that's better for patient outcomes. There is less room for variability. There is less room for error."
Aim is to cut wait from 82 weeks to 20
Hospital crunch in Capital Health region forces Royal Alex to cancel five to six joint surgeries a month
Jodie Sinnema, The Edmonton Journal
Published: Saturday, January 06, 2007
EDMONTON - A new $60-million stand-alone orthopedic surgery centre at the Royal Alexandra Hospital will help lower wait times for hip and knee replacements and reduce cancellations of the operations, says Capital Health.
"It will be the first of its kind in Canada," said Joanna Pawlyshyn, vice-president and chief operating officer at the Alex. "It should allow us, in the end, to provide the best access to joint surgery in Canada right here."
Construction on the new 80,000-square-foot facility, funded out of Capital Health's budget -- which will be erected on what is currently a surface parking lot across from the emergency department and south of the Hys Centre -- should begin this spring and be completed in early 2009.
Located at 102nd Street and 110th Avenue and linked by pedway to the hospital, the building will have two operating rooms, 56 beds and about 150 staff. The goal is to have hip and knee patients up on their feet and back home four days after surgery.
The rooms are significantly larger than older ones, providing enough space for physiotherapists to work directly at a person's bedside instead of having patients wheeled to a rehabilitation space.
Capital Health is already rolling out a new system that aims to have 90 per cent of the joint-replacement operations done within 20 weeks of the initial consultation, down from a previous 82 weeks. About 50 per cent of the 3,000 annual joint operations in the region are done that quickly now.
That target should be reached within a year, even before the new building is complete, since operating rooms and beds at the Royal Alexandra, Misericordia and University of Alberta hospitals have been devoted to the program. The new facility will help surgeons maintain that target and see the number of joint surgeries increased to 3,600 a year.
"It will allow us to become super-efficient, to improve the length of stay so we can move patients through more quickly and have them receive better care and be able to move into active lives more quickly," Pawlyshyn said.
"It will provide certainty to the public when they have their procedure booked that it's not going to be bumped because we've got emergencies. We're separating that type of work so that makes it different and unique."
Currently, about five to six joint surgeries have to be cancelled each month because of pressures in the hospital, said Dr. Don Dick, the medical lead of bone and joint health in Edmonton. Every hospital needs more space and more beds to keep up with the growing population.
The orthopedic surgery centre is part of a number of ongoing projects at the Royal Alexandra hospital that includes 14 new laboratories in the newly constructed Lois Hole Hospital, which will focus on women's and children's health issues, as well as a new $3.5-million in vitro fertilization clinic, scheduled to open this spring.
The new orthopedic surgery centre will move at least some of the hip and knee operations out of the main hospitals, freeing up room there to complete other services, Dick said.
In the next year, the administration will have to decide if all joint-replacement surgeries will be done out of the new facility or if some will remain at other hospitals.
In the last year, Capital Health saw a 10-per-cent jump in the number of people needing joint replacements and expects that rate of increase to continue for the next few years, especially with the aging population.
Other orthopedic day surgeries, such as ligament reconstruction and arthroscopy of the knee, will also be performed in the new building to maximize its use. The full load of knee and hip replacements will be phased in over time.
As physicians, we're overjoyed with the new facility," Dick said. "To have a facility where there is real consistency and patients flow through the system in a very standardized manner means that's better for patient outcomes. There is less room for variability. There is less room for error."