| | | Great fucking healthcare, says all the idiots that vote Liberal/NDP. You are responsible for this.
More Than 23,000 Patients in Canada Died Last Year While on Health-Care Wait Lists
Chandra Philip
11/26/2025|Updated: 11/26/2025
More than 23,000 Canadians have died while waiting for health care over the past year, recent government data suggests.
Think tank Second Street.org’s annual “Died on a Waiting List” report, released on Nov. 26, analyzes data sourced from provincial health authorities to determine how many people died while on a waiting list for surgery or diagnostic treatment.
A total of 23,746 Canadians died in the 2024–2025 fiscal year while awaiting treatment, the report found. That number does not include Alberta and some parts of Manitoba.
Colin Craig, report author and president of SecondStreet.org, said it was a 3 percent increase over data from the previous year. “What’s really sad is that behind many of these figures are stories of patients suffering during their final years – grandparents who dealt with chronic pain while waiting for hip operations, people leaving children behind as they die waiting for heart operations, so much suffering,” Craig said.
Patients who died last year were waiting for a variety of services, from heart surgery to diagnostic scans. One person who died had been on a waiting list for nine years, the report noted, but didn’t indicate what type of treatment the patient needed.
Related Stories
Nearly 6M Canadians on Medical Waitlists as Delays Outpace Pandemic Backlog: Report
The report also noted that government spending on health care reached an all-time high in 2024–25, at $244 billion or an average of $5,943 per person. Health-care spending for 2025–26 was “on track” to surpass that number, Craig wrote.
Provincial Numbers
Ontario recorded the highest number of deaths among wait-listed individuals, totalling 10,634, with Quebec following at 6,290. British Columbia reported 4,620 deaths while people awaited care, Nova Scotia saw 727 deaths, and Newfoundland and Labrador had 542. Saskatchewan documented 419 deaths among those on health-care waiting lists, while Manitoba had 215 individuals who died before they could receive treatment. Prince Edward Island recorded 178 patient deaths, while New Brunswick had the fewest deaths at 121.
Overall, 100,876 Canadians on a waiting list have died since 2018, SecondStreet said.
Not all provinces track the information comprehensively, SecondStreet notes. Saskatchewan and New Brunswick’s Ministries of Health only provided numbers of patients who died while on a surgical wait-list, but do not track the information for diagnostic wait-lists. It also noted that, since 2019, Alberta Health Services had provided incomplete information, and now no longer tracks the data. The organization estimated there are nearly six million people currently on a waiting list for health-care services.
Policy Recommendations
Craig made five recommendations for governments to advance health care in Canada, including improving tracking of wait-list deaths each year. “It’s interesting that governments will regularly inspect restaurants and report publicly if there’s a minor problem such as a missing paper towel holder. Meanwhile, no government reports publicly on patients dying on waiting lists,” he said.
“It’s quite hypocritical.”
The second recommendation is to transition health-care funding to activity-based funding, which would pay hospitals based on services provided instead of providing annual cheques.
“This means that patients are no longer thought of as people ‘to have to help’ but rather as customers that should be welcomed as they represent additional funding for the hospital,” Craig wrote. He said it would focus hospitals on patient care.
He also recommended governments develop partnerships with private sector companies to improve services and cut wait times.
“The Saskatchewan government credits their decision to hire private clinics with helping to reduce wait times and their surgical backlog beginning in 2010,” he said.
Craig added that Ontario’s auditor noted in 2014 that the services like MRIs, dialysis, and colonoscopies were between 20 and 40 percent less expensive in private clinics compared to hospitals.
He also recommended providing more health-care choices for patients by maintaining the public system while allowing non-government clinics to offer the same procedures.
“This approach would be similar to how parents across Canada can choose to put their children in public schools or pay out-of-pocket and send their children to non-government schools,” he wrote. Doing so would take pressure off the public health-care system, he said.
Alberta’s government recently tabled legislation to introduce a parallel private-public surgery model. The bill would allow surgeons to perform non-urgent procedures in a private system under certain restrictions.
Lastly, Craig suggested Canada develop a similar policy to the EU’s Cross Border Healthcare Directive, which allows patients the right to travel to other EU countries for health care, pay for the procedure, and be reimbursed by their home government. He said that reimbursement amounts were the equivalent of what a government would have paid to have the procedure provided locally.
“Not only would this benefit patients who decide to travel for health care, but it would also benefit those who remain in Canada,“ he said. ”This is due to the fact that patients remaining in Canada for health care would move up a spot on the waiting list each time someone ahead of them chose to travel for health care.” |
|