A snapshot of waiting times for cancer surgery provided by surgeons affiliated with regional cancer centres in Ontario.
- 21 August 2001
- journal article
- Vol. 165 (4) , 421-5
Abstract
There is evidence that delays in treatment result in increased psychosocial morbidity for patients diagnosed with cancer. We evaluated waiting times for care among cancer patients treated by surgeons affiliated with regional cancer centres in Ontario. Dates for 5 key events related to the surgical management of a patient with cancer were collected by a convenience sample of surgeons who treat breast, gynecologic, colorectal, head and neck, thoracic and urologic cancers. The key events were initial referral, first surgical visit, main treatment decision, major surgery and receipt of postoperative pathology report. The surgeons were also asked to judge the appropriateness of the waiting times for the intervals studied and to identify factors associated with inappropriate delays. A total of 62 surgeons affiliated with 8 regional cancer centres participated; data were collected for 1456 patients who underwent assessment and whose surgical visit occurred between Jan. 31 and May 31, 2000. The median waiting time from referral to first visit was 11.0 days, from first visit to treatment decision 0.0 days, from treatment decision to surgery 20.0 days and from surgery to receipt of the pathology report 8.0 days. The median waiting times for the 2 summary intervals (referral to surgery and referral to receipt of the pathology report) were 37.0 and 48.0 days respectively. The waiting times varied by cancer type; for example, the median time from referral to surgery varied from 29.0 days for colorectal cancers to 64.0 days for urologic cancers. The same interval varied from 19.0 to 43.0 days by treatment centre. The waiting times did not vary substantially by patient age. The surgeons judged that 344 (37.2%) of the 925 patients with dates for the referral-to-surgery interval had inappropriately long waiting times. They indicated that contributing factors to these inappropriate waits were shortage of operating room time (in 181 cases), lack of other resources such as diagnostic tests or allied health personnel (in 156) and patient preference or circumstance (in 28) (factors were not mutually exclusive). Many of the patients with cancer seen by surgeons affiliated with regional cancer centres in Ontario may be experiencing significant delays in the assessment and treatment of their cancer.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Waiting time for breast cancer surgery in Quebec.2001
- Breast cancer survival by teaching status of the initial treating hospital.2001
- Delays in diagnosis and melanoma prognosis (I): the role of patients.2000
- Hospital procedure volume and teaching status do not influence treatment and outcome measures of rectal cancer surgery in a large general populationJournal of Gastrointestinal Surgery, 2000
- Prostate cancer: a comprehensive reviewMedical Oncology, 2000
- Breast cancer: delays, dilemmas, and delusionsThe Lancet, 1999
- Delay in the diagnosis and outcome of colorectal cancer:a prospective studyEuropean Journal of Surgical Oncology, 1999
- Time elapsing from cancer diagnosis and anxiety in women attending cancer genetic clinics.Oncology Reports, 1998
- The impact of delayed diagnosis of lung cancer on the stage at the time of operationEuropean Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, 1997
- The Existential Plight in Cancer: Significance of the First 100 DaysThe International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 1977