The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION
Apps help patients avoid hours of waiting in ERs and walk-in clinics
TORONTO - Patients across Canada are increasingly turning to websites and apps to get a better sense of the wait times they face at walk-in clinics and hospitals.
Appletree Medical Group Inc., has been offering wait time information for dozens of clinics in the Greater Toronto Area and around Ottawa for about 10 years, said Dr. Tim Bell, the company's medical director.
Web and mobile updates are provided every 15 minutes, allowing patients to scan a list of nearby clinics and head to the one that is the least busy.
Providing data about the most-packed waiting rooms helps to more efficiently spread traffic across all the company's clinics, Bell said.
"Seven days a week across the Ottawa area a patient can see a physician within an hour on average and now we're doing the same thing in Toronto," he said.
"We have about 450,000 patients that we take care of regularly between the GTA and Ottawa, so the patients can decide if they want to see their family doctor, who may have a two-hour wait, or they could go up the street and see a colleague of theirs.
"It certainly gives them options."
Some patients have said they also appreciate choosing between a male or female doctor, Bell added.
Alberta Health Services has been running a similar service for hospital emergency rooms in Calgary for about a year, and in recent weeks went online with wait times for Edmonton ERs.
Around 17,000 Apple users and 1,000 Android users have now downloaded a mobile app to get ER updates, while a website that refreshes every few minutes is averaging about 30,000 visits monthly.
Alberta Health Services is happy with how well the automated system is providing estimates for patients, although it's not something that can ever be completely perfected, said spokesman Dave Brewin.
"We're seeing very good accuracy but you have to take into consideration that there's very ill people coming into the emergency departments and there's not extremely ill people coming in," he said, adding that patients without a serious medical condition should know they might face longer wait times than what they see online.
"If you're highly acute you're obviously going to wait a heck of a lot less than what you see online there. And if you've got a much less acute issue, you're going to wait longer than what you see online.
"And I think that's fairly expected when people are looking at these things, they understand."
In Quebec, a company called Bonjour-sant� takes a different approach and is betting that patients are willing to pay to skip the walk-in clinic lines. For $12 plus tax, users can input their postal code and then choose a nearby location and time for a same-day appointment with a doctor.
———
On the web:
Alberta Health Services wait times -http://www.albertahealthservices.ca/4770.asp
Appletree Medical Group Toronto wait times -http://www.appletreetoronto.com//locations.php
Appletree Medical Group Ottawa wait times -
http://www.appletreemedicalgroup.com//locations.php
Bonjour-sant� - http://bonjour-sante.ca
More Your Health
- Back to Top
- Return to Your Health
More Your Health
(1 of 15 articles for today)
Illicit drug users in Abbotsford, B.C., sue to back demands for health services
11:29 AM 0ABBOTSFORD, B.C. - Three drug addicts are taking the City of Abbotsford, B.C., to court alleging its public health policies ...
Poll
Most Popular Your Health
- Skin picking gets status as distinct disorder, should help sufferers access help
- Measles outbreaks flourish in UK years after discredited research tied measles shot to autism
- Baker's cyst A sign of something else
- Avoid herpes -- make love like a porcupine
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Saved by the kettlebell
- Adrenal fatigue can have significant impact
- New Brunswick discouraging new family doctors from practising: medical residents
- Three companies recall antipsychotic drug quetiapine: Health Canada says
- Reduced urinary flow a reality for older men
- No evidence cycle helmet laws reduce head injuries: study
- Skin picking gets status as distinct disorder, should help sufferers access help
- Measles outbreaks flourish in UK years after discredited research tied measles shot to autism
- Baker's cyst A sign of something else
- Three companies recall antipsychotic drug quetiapine: Health Canada says
- Avoid herpes -- make love like a porcupine
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Opposition wants inquest into death of woman who left Winnipeg hospital ER
- Reduced urinary flow a reality for older men
- Adrenal fatigue can have significant impact
- Baby delivery: safe haven baby drop-off sites open in Edmonton hospitals
- Boston Marathon bombing victims face huge medical bills; tens of millions in donations pour in
- Angelina Jolie's double mastectomy: Q&A
- Pharmacy assistant who found diluted cancer drugs says label raised questions
- Auditor general takes aim at residential schools, diabetes prevention
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Hockey commentator Kelly Hrudey shares daughter's struggle with mental illness
- Biomedical engineer designs exercises, tests to battle Alzheimer's
- Baker's cyst A sign of something else
- No evidence cycle helmet laws reduce head injuries: study
- Skin picking gets status as distinct disorder, should help sufferers access help
- Adrenal fatigue can have significant impact
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Skin picking gets status as distinct disorder, should help sufferers access help
- Ontario Nurses Association seeks moratorium on cuts to registered nursing jobs
- Adrenal fatigue can have significant impact
- Canadian dies with aid of doctor in Zurich; wished it could have been in Canada
- No evidence cycle helmet laws reduce head injuries: study
- Avoid herpes -- make love like a porcupine
- Three companies recall antipsychotic drug quetiapine: Health Canada says
- Measles outbreaks flourish in UK years after discredited research tied measles shot to autism
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Biomedical engineer designs exercises, tests to battle Alzheimer's
- AGING AMERICA: Poll finds people in denial about the need for long-term care as they get older
- Adrenal fatigue can have significant impact
- Kidney problems price we pay for progress
- Natural medicine best for lowering cholesterol
- Hockey commentator Kelly Hrudey shares daughter's struggle with mental illness
- Skin picking gets status as distinct disorder, should help sufferers access help
- Knee repair? Study finds physical therapy as good as surgery for torn cartilage, arthritis
- Federal Court tells Ottawa to reimburse First Nation for disabled child's costs
Ads by Google











You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.