A System Built for Bureaucracy, Not Efficiency
Canada’s healthcare system is not just slow—it’s deliberately structured in a way that keeps it inefficient. Instead of prioritizing patient care, the system is bogged down by unnecessary administrative layers. Each department operates like a separate entity, creating layers of bureaucracy that slow down medical processes instead of streamlining them. The health board has created countless branches, each with its own leadership, adding unnecessary jobs and red tape that delay patient care.
Outdated Methods Keep Healthcare Stuck in the Past
Despite advancements in medical technology, many hospitals and clinics still function as if it’s the 1960s or 1970s. Even with cutting-edge imaging technology, results are still written down by hand and stored in physical binders instead of being digitally processed in real time. This outdated approach means patients become nothing more than numbers, lost in a slow-moving system where every delay translates to suffering and even life-threatening consequences.
Are Healthcare Workers Encouraged to Work Slowly?
An even more alarming issue is that the slower the process, the more money certain individuals make. When doctors and nurses take longer to process patients, more funds flow through the system. Instead of optimizing efficiency, the structure financially rewards inefficiency, leading to delays in diagnosis, treatment, and ultimately, worse health outcomes for Canadians.
How AI and Digital Transformation Could Fix the System
If healthcare fully embraced modern AI and automation, patient care could be transformed overnight. Imagine a system where:
AI instantly processes test results in milliseconds, reducing wait times from weeks to minutes.
Automated systems replace unnecessary paperwork, eliminating the need for slow, outdated record-keeping.
Doctors and nurses focus on actual patient care, rather than navigating bureaucratic red tape.
With the right technology and leadership, Canada’s healthcare system could be revolutionized. But until these changes are made, patients will continue to suffer while the system prioritizes profits and inefficiency over human lives.