Stay informed with the LNN Daily Newsletter
Chinook Regional Hospital sign in Lethbridge. (Photo: Lethbridge News Now)

84% of Albertans experienced “long” waits for emergency healthcare: Survey

Jul 22, 2022 | 2:40 PM

LETHBRIDGE, AB – A growing percentage of Albertans are unhappy with emergency healthcare in the province.

That is according to a new survey from the Alberta Medical Association, which polled 4,398 Albertans between June 14-24, 2022.

84% of respondents said wait times in Alberta’s EDs are long with the tipping point being approximately three hours. That number has increased by 16% since the same survey was completed in 2016.

The perception among Albertans is that emergency care is heading in the wrong direction.

42% believe that the overall quality of care in EDs has gotten worse in the last four years while 66% say timeliness is declining.

About half describe making the decision to not attend an ED for treatment of a medical condition, despite thinking it likely warranted emergency care. In the South Health Zone, 44% were hesitant about visiting an ED.

Alberta Medical Association President Vesta Michelle Warren says there is a common thread linking many of these concerns.

“What patients have told us with this survey bears out what the Section of Emergency Medicine and other physician leaders have been saying: Lack of access to integrated primary care in the community, upstream of the ED, is contributing significantly to patient loads in the ED,” says Warren. “Our study shows that almost half of patients went to an ED as a last resort.”

Warren believes that valued allied health professionals like pharmacists and nurse practitioners can deliver high-quality care to patients that reduce the likelihood that they will need to seek emergency care.

More details from the survey can be found on the Alberta Medical Association website.