
Manitoba to add 800 annual hip, knee replacement surgeries in Selkirk
CBC
The province will ease the burden of surgical backlogs beginning early in the new year, the premier says.
Premier Wab Kinew is expected to unveil that an additional 800 hip and knee replacement surgeries will be performed annually out of the Selkirk Regional Health Centre during Tuesday's throne speech at the Manitoba Legislature.
It's a big boost to shrinking surgical wait times, which have grown since the COVID-19 pandemic.
"This is all about giving Manitobans who are waiting for a hip surgery or a knee surgery what they want, which is a date to get that procedure," Kinew told CBC News on Monday evening.
"We're making the investment in staffing and having more people on the front lines means that you can be seen more quickly, and we'll be able to cut down on those wait times."
The province recruited two surgeons from outside Manitoba, as well as an anesthesiologist, all of whom will play a pivotal hands-on role in performing the surgeries.
The estimated price tag is $4 million, according to the province.
A report from the Canadian Institute for Health Information last month noted that between April and September 2023, just 50 per cent of hip and knee replacements in Manitoba were done within the clinically accepted benchmark of 26 weeks.
The national average during the reporting period was 62 per cent, with Manitoba only ahead of Saskatchewan and the Atlantic provinces on a province-to-province scale.
The national average was 72 per cent in 2019.
The biggest hurdle to having more hip and knee surgeries performed in Manitoba on a daily basis came down to staffing and recruiting health-care professionals back to the front lines following "the exodus of staff" under the previous Progressive Conservative government, the premier said.
More staff, including nurses, to go along with 15 new transitional care beds that are now up and running at the Selkirk hospital allowed the province to add the additional surgeries.
Kinew was non-committal when asked if more hospitals would be able to offer hip and knee surgeries in the future.
"We've got to have a provincewide approach here and that's why announcing this at Selkirk is exciting for our team. We know that there's a lot of people who are going to get their procedures at the Concordia Hospital, the Grace Hospital, other sites around the province," he said.













