Concerns mount over hospital capacity as Ontario hits 5,000 COVID-related deaths
Officials in several Canadian provinces expressed concerns Monday about the health network’s ability to handle a rising tide of COVID-19 cases, with a senior Quebec health official warning that the province could soon face difficult choices about whom to treat.
Dr. Lucie Opatrny, an associate deputy minister in Quebec’s Health Department, said hospitals across the province are at maximum capacity and struggling to keep up even with cancer and emergency surgeries.
At a news conference alongside Premier Francois Legault, she said hospitals are being forced to delay more and more surgeries and treatments, creating a backlog that she said could last “months or even years.”
Worse, she said the network was preparing for the possibility of having to use its protocol of prioritizing access to intensive care — essentially deciding which seriously ill patients get treated first if it becomes impossible to help them all.

