Doctors in FIFA World Cup cities worry about ER capacity, strain on health system
TORONTO — Doctors in Canada’s FIFA World Cup host cities say they’re concerned the already strained health-care system will buckle if a sudden, unexpected surge slams emergency departments during the games.
Dr. Catherine Varner, an emergency medicine physician in Toronto, wrote an editorial in the Canadian Medical Association Journal Monday raising concerns about vulnerabilities in the health-care system that she says need to be addressed before more than 300,000 soccer fans set foot in Toronto and Vancouver in June.
Both cities have hosted mass gatherings in the past. Local and provincial public health officials are actively anticipating health risks, with Public Health Ontario flagging measles, food-borne illnesses and COVID-19 as potential concerns. Toronto and Vancouver also have wastewater surveillance systems set up to detect infectious disease outbreaks during and after the World Cup.
But Varner said it’s the anticipation of unexpected events that gives her chills when she walks into a night shift while the city is rowdy, and the hospital is running at 100 per cent capacity, or above.


