Simple things like walking to the end of the driveway to check the letterbox are getting harder for Julie Monopoli, as she waits for South Australian authorities to allow her surgery to go ahead.
She lives with scoliosis, where the vertebrae do not form a straight line but are curved — a condition which she describes as "debilitating".
"Because of the pain, I can't really focus on things," Ms Monopoli said.
Despite her pain, discomfort and trouble walking, her surgery was not classified as urgent enough to happen under the state's current pandemic restrictions, which limit elective surgeries in order to preserve resources for COVID-positive patients.
Ms Monopoli found out on Friday her surgery was cancelled and, with authorities yet to announce when more elective surgeries could resume, she has joined the long list of people with no date for when their surgery could proceed.
"It will help me lead a better life and hopefully get rid of this neck pain that I've got at the moment," she said.
Surgeons claim private hospitals in South Australia have been sitting "idle" and have the staff, operating theatres and beds to enable more elective surgeries.
Some are calling on the state government to ease the freeze on non-urgent surgeries.
Adelaide neurosurgeon Matthew McDonald said he had received phone calls from patients in tears, wanting to know when more procedures would be allowed.
"Even though it's elective surgery, it's really important surgery.
"These people might have trouble walking, they might have trouble working because of their pain."
In the three weeks since the freeze on certain types of elective surgery was put into place, Professor McDonald said he had cancelled 25 operations.
"Every week, there's going to be five or 10 patients added to the operating waiting list — and that's just me," he said.
Professor McDonald said cancelling elective surgery was unnecessary and led to private hospital staff "not doing much".
Rather than his usual operating day on Friday, Professor McDonald was instead doing paperwork, in a sign of how quiet his operating schedule had become.
The rationale for the government's decision to pause various elective surgeries was to make extra resources available for managing COVID, but Professor McDonald said private hospitals had the ability to be ready within two or three days and did not need to be restricted for weeks.
Spine and orthopaedic surgeon Mike Selby described a similar experience, with only a third of operating theatres being used.
Dr Selby wanted all "category two" elective surgery cases — which are those that require treatment within 90 days — to be allowed in private hospitals, given the resources were available.
Otherwise, he warned, there would big backlogs into the future, especially for public patients.
Chief Public Health Officer Professor Nicola Spurrier said from a clinical perspective she did not want bans on elective surgeries to last long because many people needed to have their operations done.
But she said the current priority was to boost the COVID-19 vaccination rate in the community, which private hospital staff were helping to do.
Ms Spurrier said it was "too early to say" when the surgeries could resume, but it was "top of our agenda" to keep monitoring when the rules could be eased.