Unveiling the Hidden Economic Toll of Healthcare Delays
Canada's universal healthcare system, while providing essential access to medically necessary treatments, comes with a significant downside: prolonged wait times that impose substantial private costs on patients. A groundbreaking study released on March 10, 2026, by the Fraser Institute titled The Private Cost of Public Queues for Medically Necessary Care, 2026 quantifies this burden, estimating that in 2025 alone, Canadian patients lost over $4.2 billion in wages and productivity while awaiting treatment. Authored by Senior Policy Analyst Bacchus Barua and Analyst Francesca Esmail, the report draws on physician surveys and national wage data to paint a vivid picture of how delays erode economic output and individual well-being.
At its core, the analysis reveals that approximately 1.39 million Canadians—about 3.3% of the population—were waiting for treatment following a specialist consultation in 2025. These waits, averaging 13.3 weeks nationally from specialist to treatment, translate into 24.7 million total weeks of delay. Factoring in the proportion of time rendered unproductive due to pain, reduced mobility, and emotional strain (estimated at 13.2% based on Statistics Canada's 2013 Canadian Community Health Survey data), the lost productive weeks amount to 3.3 million. Valued at average weekly wages of $1,330 nationally, this yields the staggering $4.2 billion figure—an average of $3,043 per waiting patient.
Breaking Down the Provincial Disparities in Wait Time Costs
Wait times and their economic fallout vary dramatically across provinces, highlighting regional inequities in Canada's healthcare delivery. Quebec bore the highest absolute cost at $1.295 billion, affecting 331,034 patients (3.7% of its population), largely due to its large population and median specialist-to-treatment wait of around 14 weeks. Ontario, despite having the shortest overall waits, still saw $770 million in losses for 401,463 patients.
| Province | Patients Waiting | % of Population | Total Cost ($ thousands) | Per Patient Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| British Columbia | 214,821 | 3.8% | 584,239 | $2,720 |
| Alberta | 151,499 | 3.0% | 564,231 | $3,724 |
| Saskatchewan | 70,307 | 5.5% | 224,608 | $3,195 |
| Manitoba | 58,172 | 3.9% | 187,312 | $3,220 |
| Ontario | 401,463 | 2.5% | 769,876 | $1,918 |
| Quebec | 331,034 | 3.7% | 1,295,054 | $3,912 |
| New Brunswick | 43,434 | 5.0% | 211,273 | $4,864 |
| Nova Scotia | 65,711 | 6.0% | 217,970 | $3,317 |
| Prince Edward Island | 7,066 | 3.9% | 24,490 | $3,466 |
| Newfoundland & Labrador | 42,780 | 7.8% | 139,485 | $3,261 |
New Brunswick patients faced the steepest per capita hit at $4,864, reflecting longer waits and lower average wages. Smaller provinces like PEI and Newfoundland showed higher proportions waiting (up to 7.8%), straining local economies further.

The Rigorous Methodology: From Physician Surveys to Wage Valuation
The study's methodology builds on decades of Fraser Institute research, primarily leveraging data from Waiting Your Turn: Wait Times for Health Care in Canada, 2025, which surveys over 1,000 physicians across 12 specialties in 10 provinces. This yields median waits and estimates of patients queued post-consultation—1.39 million in 2025.
Lost productivity is calculated conservatively: total wait weeks multiplied by 13.2% (from StatsCan's 2013 survey on wait impacts), then valued using 2025 average weekly wages ($1,330 nationally, province-specific from StatsCan Table 14-10-0426-01). Only workweek hours are counted, excluding family burdens, non-work leisure loss, or heightened mortality risks. An alternative 'all waking hours' estimate balloons costs to $12.9 billion.
Critics have historically questioned the physician sample size and potential bias toward private care advocacy, but the consistent trends align with other reports confirming Canada's outlier status in OECD wait times.
Historical Trends: A Growing Burden Over Three Decades
Since 1993, when median GP-to-treatment waits stood at 9.3 weeks, they have surged 208% to 28.6 weeks in 2025—second-longest on record. Per-patient costs have risen 58% inflation-adjusted since 2004 ($1,923 to $3,043), despite nominal dips in 2025 due to slight wait reductions in some provinces like Ontario (19.2 weeks total).
This escalation mirrors physician shortages, aging populations, and post-COVID backlogs. Provinces like New Brunswick (60.9 weeks) and Nova Scotia (49.0 weeks) exemplify the crisis, while Alberta and Saskatchewan saw improvements.
Photo by David Trinks on Unsplash
Beyond Wages: Broader Economic and Health Implications
The $4.2 billion loss—equivalent to 0.15% of Canada's GDP—ripples through families and businesses via absenteeism and reduced output. Patients miss work, forgo promotions, or exit the workforce prematurely, exacerbating labor shortages in key sectors.Full Fraser Institute Report (PDF)
Health-wise, delays worsen conditions: ophthalmology waits (top volume at 183,140 patients) risk vision loss; orthopedic delays prolong pain. Other studies echo this, noting poorer outcomes and higher downstream costs versus timely care in peer nations.
- Increased mortality from untreated cardiac issues.
- Mental health strain from chronic pain and uncertainty.
- Family caregiver burdens, unquantified here.
Specialty-Specific Insights: Where Delays Hit Hardest
Ophthalmology led with 183,140 waitlisted patients, followed by general surgery (152,000+). Cardiovascular surgery had fewer (2,440) but high stakes. National median specialist-to-treatment: 13.3 weeks, up from GP referral adds 15.3 weeks total.
These patterns underscore supply bottlenecks in diagnostic imaging and surgical capacity, common pain points post-pandemic.
Government and Policy Responses: Steps Toward Reform
Federal and provincial governments have pledged billions via the 2023 Working Group on Canada Health Transfer, targeting waits. Ontario's 19.2-week median reflects surgical backlogs reduction efforts; Alberta invests in private clinics. Yet, no direct 2026 response to this study, as it's nascent.
Fraser authors note: "As long as lengthy wait times define Canada's health-care system, patients will continue to pay a price in lost time and reduced quality of life." Solutions floated include parallel private delivery, workforce expansion, and tech-enabled triage.Waiting Your Turn 2025 Report
Stakeholder Perspectives: From Patients to Providers
Patients report profound impacts: one Global News feature highlights stories of lost income and deteriorating health. Physicians, per surveys, cite resource shortages. Economists align on productivity drags, with prior studies pegging 2023 costs at $3.5 billion.
Balanced views note Fraser's conservative lean but validate core trends via OECD data: Canada lags peers like Germany (weeks vs. months).
Photo by Andy Holmes on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Pathways to Shorter Waits and Savings
Optimism stems from AI triage pilots, telehealth expansion, and nurse practitioner scopes. If waits halve, savings could top $2 billion annually, boosting GDP and lives. Policymakers must prioritize evidence-based reforms amid aging demographics.
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Conclusion: Time for Action on Healthcare Efficiency
The Fraser Institute's $4.2 billion revelation underscores urgency: waits are not just inconvenient—they're economically devastating. Canadians deserve timelier care. Explore higher ed jobs in health policy, rate my professor for relevant courses, or university jobs advancing research. Share your thoughts below.







