RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 The impact of delayed nonurgent surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic on surgeons in Alberta: a qualitative interview study JF CMAJ Open JO CMAJ FD Canadian Medical Association SP E587 OP E596 DO 10.9778/cmajo.20220188 VO 11 IS 4 A1 Natalia Jaworska A1 Emma Schalm A1 Jaling Kersen A1 Christine Smith A1 Jennifer Dorman A1 Mary Brindle A1 Joseph Dort A1 Khara M. Sauro YR 2023 UL http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/11/4/E587.abstract AB Background: During the COVID-19 pandemic, nonurgent surgeries were delayed to preserve capacity for patients admitted with COVID-19; surgeons were challenged personally and professionally during this time. We aimed to describe the impact of delays to nonurgent surgeries during the COVID-19 pandemic from the surgeons’ perspective in Alberta.Methods: We conducted an interpretive description qualitative study in Alberta from January to March 2022. We recruited adult and pediatric surgeons via social media and through personal contacts from our research network. Semistructured interviews were conducted via Zoom, and we analyzed the data via inductive thematic analysis to identify relevant themes and subthemes related to the impact of delaying nonurgent surgery on surgeons and their provision of surgical care.Results: We conducted 12 interviews with 9 adult surgeons and 3 pediatric surgeons. Six themes were identified: accelerator for a surgical care crisis, health system inequity, system-level management of disruptions in surgical services, professional and interprofessional impact, personal impact, and pragmatic adaptation to health system strain. Participants also identified strategies to mitigate the challenges experienced due to nonurgent surgical delays during the COVID-19 pandemic (i.e., additional operating time, surgical process reviews to reduce inefficiencies, and advocacy for sustained funding of hospital beds, human resources and community-based postoperative care).Interpretation: Our study describes the impacts and challenges experienced by adult and pediatric surgeons of delayed nonurgent surgeries because of the COVID-19 pandemic response. Surgeons identified potential health system–, hospital- and physician-level strategies to minimize future impacts on patients from delays of nonurgent surgery.