Performing minor surgeries in rural hospitals could help improve the provincial surgery backlog without cutting corners on the quality of health care, according to one rural health expert.
A recent study published in the Canadian Journal of Surgery compared patient outcomes for minor surgeries, looking at how patients did if they were operated on by a family physician with enhanced surgical skills or by a specialist surgeon, and if they were at a rural hospital, like the Creston Valley Hospital and Health Centre, or a larger referral facility, like the ones in Kelowna, Kamloops, Cranbrook and Prince George.
Turns out patients did great no matter who their surgeon was or where their surgery was ...
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