The Times They Are A-Changing: What Worked and What We Learned in Deploying Ontario's Wait Time Information System
Author(s) -
Hugh MacLeod,
Alan Hudson,
Sarah Krämer,
Murray Martin
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
healthcare quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1929-6347
DOI - 10.12927/hcq.2009.20744
Subject(s) - action (physics) , public relations , health care , work (physics) , best practice , call to action , medicine , medical emergency , nursing , business , political science , marketing , engineering , law , physics , quantum mechanics , mechanical engineering
How many days would you be comfortable waiting if you needed cancer surgery? What would you do if someone, not as medically urgent, was able to receive an MRI or CT scan before you? Would you want to know if you could wait less time for treatment at another location or with another clinician? These are some of the dilemmas facing patients and our health system when dealing with the issue of wait times. To address these pressing concerns, in the fall of 2004, Ontario launched its Wait Time Strategy. Two years later, Collins-Nakai et al. (2006) reported that Ontario had moved "from being a laggard to a leader" with respect to wait times. This article summarizes Ontario's work to date to improve access to care, including reviewing the need, action taken and the emerging results. Much can be learned and leveraged from the experiences described in this article and throughout this issue. They can serve as an important starting point for further discussion, improvement and action, for initiatives big and small, by all types of organizations and jurisdictions.
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