Ontario hospitals brace for Omicron's impact as hundreds of staff members call in sick
CBC
Hospitals and clinics across Ontario are bracing for the impacts of the Omicron variant, according to the medical director of Occupational Health Services at the University Health Network (UHN).
Dr. John Granton said the province's health-care system is already showing signs of strain, with about 100 UHN staff members calling in sick every day.
As Omicron cases continue to surge, the number of hospitalizations are expected to rise. This influx has likely been amplified by holiday gatherings over the past few weeks, Granton said.
"We're seeing the consequence of that now, and we'll continue to see that probably for the next 10 days," he said. "I think we're really going to have to pull out all the stops to try to keep the machine running."
As hundreds of staff members are calling in sick each day, hospitals and clinics across the province are redeploying employees to ensure that emergency services, including intensive care units, remain operational. As a result, Ontario's Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore reports that thousands of procedures — those unrelated to COVID — will be delayed per week.
"Generally what we would look at through a typical week would be somewhere between eight to ten thousand surgeries or other procedures that will be impacted by this," Moore said at a Monday morning news conference.
Over the next few weeks, all sectors are likely to see about 20 to 30 per cent of workers calling in sick, Moore said.
While that includes health care, the medical officer also said there are measures in place to get health-care workers back to work as quickly as possible.
Those measures include allowing employees to isolate for a shorter period of time than they would have to with previous variants of the virus, Granton said. "We don't keep them off for 10 days or two weeks anymore. We can probably just keep them off for five days," he said. "I think we're feeling a little more reassured … If this was Delta with the same magnitude of effect on making people sick, we'd be very frightened."
But there is still cause for concern, Dr. Lisa Salamon of Ontario's Scarborough Health Network told CBC News.
"We're going to have a really rough four to six weeks," she said. "It's a huge trickle effect when we have staffing shortages all the way down from the ICU to the hospital wards to the emergency departments."
Staffing shortages are nothing new during the pandemic, and Salamon said it's frustrating to see the government react slowly.
"Two years into this, it's really very frustrating," she said. "We saw this happening three weeks ago, four weeks ago, probably. And it's very frustrating that now, when things are really just out of control, that all of a sudden they're making the decision [to go back to Step Two of the province's reopening plan]."
The Ontario government announced Monday that the province would move back to Step Two of it's Roadmap to Reopening plan.