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Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre reduces cancer
surgery wait times.
February 8, 2006
Building on Tuesday’s announcement of the highly anticipated
Ontario Cancer Plan Progress Report launched by Cancer Care
Ontario (CCO), Regional Cancer Care at the Thunder Bay Regional
Health Sciences Centre (TBRHSC) today announced the Regional
Cancer Plan for Northwestern Ontario. These brand new comprehensive
plans will address the gaps in cancer care across the province
and our region, including continuing to improve upon the already
dramatically reduced wait times for cancer surgeries in our
region.
One of the key messages from Tuesday’s launch heralded
the 16% drop in radiation wait times across the province,
through expanded services and new capital projects. In Northwestern
Ontario, where the median wait times for radiation are the
shortest in the province, Regional Cancer Care is celebrating
the dramatic turnaround in wait times for cancer surgeries,
consistently reporting in the top ten across the province,
with a respective first and second for breast and colorectal
cancer surgery median wait times.
Additionally,
in early 2005, median wait times for an MRI were within approximately
365 days; they are now approximately 27 days, and CT waits
have dropped to approximately a 4 day wait, positioning TBRHSC
as second in the province. Due largely to the planning and
strategies that came out of the Ontario Cancer Plan for Northwestern
Ontario, the wait times for cancer surgery and the MRI and
CT diagnostic procedures have been reduced through additional
equipment, provincial support, better allocation of resources,
and a focus on the gaps in cancer care across the spectrum
of care. “In an area like Northwestern Ontario, the
overarching challenges of awareness, education, access and
geography are the main reasons for the excitement behind our
Regional Cancer Program and the continuing improvements. We
have close to 300,000 residents in Northwestern Ontario over
a vast area, which translates into 2% of Ontario's population
on more than half of its land mass," commented Michael
Power, Vice President of Regional Cancer and Diagnostic Services.
"One third of our population is Aboriginal, with limited
access to full service cancer care. Additionally, in those
communities, there exists a cultural barrier of language,
awareness and education, so our challenge is threefold. Through
the exhaustive investigations of our Plan secretariats, we
are finding that we are making unprecedented progress in these
areas."
“After one year, the Ontario Cancer Plan is already
improving our ability to detect and treat cancer, but more
needs to be done to manage burgeoning cancer rates,”
said Dr. Terry Sullivan, president and CEO, Cancer Care Ontario.
“The province’s cancer care plan is on the right
track. Our job now is to continue to improve the standard
of cancer care, make targeted investments to reduce wait times
and meet patient needs, and put a major effort behind cancer
prevention and screening.”
The
improvements in care and access are exciting and encouraging,
but require careful focus and continued development
and implementation to ensure their success. "These
initiatives are paramount to the delivery of patient
care in Northwestern Ontario," said Dr. Dimitrios
Vergidis, Chief of Oncology at Thunder Bay Regional
Health Sciences Centre. "Promoting education, awareness,
healthy lifestyles and screening will curtail the volume
of cancer patients in our region, coming to us with
later stages of cancer. These are absolutely necessary
to continue to provide the level of care that our patients
should expect from us." |
CCO has drilled down into six priorities for action in the
Plan, to improve the quality of cancer services for patients
and to realize the full potential of prevention and screening.
- Better quality – Cancer Care Ontario
has created new clinical guidelines for cancer screening
and treatment, and produced the first organizational standards
for colorectal and lung surgeries. As part of the government’s
Wait Time Strategy, funding for hospitals has been tied
to better information and quality improvements for cancer
surgery; In Northwestern Ontario, Palliative Care Lead appointed
December 2005 for palliative care regionally and within
the TBRHSC; Pathology Reporting Checklist (CAP); Disease
Site Secretariats created in Breast, Colon, Prostate, Gynaecologic
and Lung – organizational and regional indicators
of performance developed along with a series of qualitative
challenges in each disease site area.
- Better local accessibility – Regional
Cancer Programs were created to link together care providers,
patients and decision makers to coordinate and improve local
cancer services. There are now 14 Regional Cancer Programs
linked to the Local Health Integration Networks (LHINs)
that are working to improve local cancer services so that
every Ontario patient has access to an equally high quality
of cancer care, as close to home as possible; In Northwestern
Ontario, 5 Disease Site ‘secretariats’ created
with numerous challenges identified for the operational
networks to assess and act upon, and metrics created to
monitor performance; ‘Operational Networks’
created in eight areas (Prevention, Screening, Diagnostics,
Surgery, Systemic, Radiation, Palliative, Survivorship).
- Better services – There has been
important progress in detecting cancer early and meeting
patients’ care needs, but more needs to be done to
close the gap between demand for cancer care and the province’s
capacity to provide services; In Northwestern Ontario, All
Cancer 20/20 targets aligned with disease site secretariat
recommendations, regional 2008 targets created, regional
prevention network created, further integration with Public
Health; New Public Health “Tobacco” Manager
to join the RCP team; 5 new smoking control by-laws mentored
by “our” Tobacco Free Coalition; Colorectal
Cancer Screening “preparation” program being
developed by the Screening Network; Growth in breast screening
(new affiliates like TBRHSC, annual screens); Aboriginal
Cancer agenda grows – Aboriginal Cancer Committee
working on smoking control by-laws for on-reserve communities;
Post Construction Operating Plan (PCOP) funded ($1.188M);
New capital projects to support cancer patients complete:
2nd MRI, new Lodge, new breast health assessment centre;
Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) go-live in
2006, High Dose Rate Brachytherapy (HDR) Prostate go-live
2006, Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Spectroscopy go-live
2006; Full complement of radiation, systemic, general practitioners
in oncology (GPO), and cancer surgeons.
- Better care – The government’s
Wait Time Strategy investments have resulted in better access
to cancer surgeries, better information to manage wait times,
and lasting improvements in the quality of cancer services
in Ontario. Government-funded innovation projects have generated
new ideas to improve access to cancer care; In Northwestern
Ontario, Median wait time recommendations met in MRI, CT,
radiation, systemic and all cancer surgery areas in 2005/06;
New wait times performance office put in place (regionally)
and managed by the Integrated Cancer Program; New decision
support tools created in all cancer care areas (to align
with new regional indicator development); New Centre for
Breast Screening & Assessment go-live March 23rd.
- Better information – Cancer Care
Ontario now has information management tools in place to
promote accountability, and to manage better cancer system
performance and report to providers and the public about
cancer services; In Northwestern Ontario, Introduction of
Cancer System Quality Index (CSQI), Cancer 20/20, regional
indicators to baseline and track performance in each key
area; ‘Communities of practice’ model in place
in surgery – ie: first colon cancer surgeon (November
2005) funded to take an in-depth laparoscopic colon cancer
surgical improvement program (Dr. G. Mapeso); Picture Archiving
Communications System (PACS) and Electronic Medical Record
(EMR) integration (pan-northern strategy); Electronic medical
systems integration now being studied for September 2006
deadline; Manager of Cancer System Performance in place
– active pilot project users of the system performance
life cycle.
- Better research – Cancer Care Ontario
has restructured and fortified its research efforts, creating
research networks in four key areas that support CCO’s
priorities: patterns of cancer care, experimental therapeutics,
improved cancer imaging, and the link between molecular
factors and cancer in the population; In Northwestern Ontario,
RCP Northwest aligned with Cancer Care Ontario research
themes, with Molecular Imaging an area of key interest;
New joint venture with Sunnybrook & Womens Research
Institute (SWRI) being explored to create a “Centre
of Excellence”; New Cancer and Cardiac Research Institute
to be birthed in 2006; Active member of Mayor’s Health
Sector Task Force; ICR Discoveries: 21 PHD Cancer Researchers
collaborating in Northwestern Ontario ($600K in annual research
grants); NOSM/TBRHSC sign new research agreement; New corporate
strategic plan for TBRHSC (research an area of focus); First
animal research lab in Northwestern Ontario.
CCO is the provincial umbrella organization that steers and
coordinates Ontario’s cancer services and prevention
efforts, setting standards of care through evidence based
guidelines and initiatives to address the burden on cancer
in Ontario. In 2003, CCO identified that there were fundamental
areas in the continuum of cancer care that needed greater
strategic direction and improvement, and initiated a plan
that would impact cancer care across every region. During
this time, it has worked with all of the cancer centres across
the province to collect information on all of the regions
in Ontario to determine gaps in the cancer systems. This Ontario
Cancer Plan incorporates provincial initiatives like the Cancer
Quality Index and Cancer 2020, providing a blueprint for cancer
care, and ensuring the data is applicable to determining the
highest standards of care for any cancer patient across Ontario.

Click
here to view the complete Ontario Cancer Plan 2005 Progress
Report
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