source: AIHW
According to the AIHW, the procedure with the lowest median waiting time in 2005 06 was coronary artery bypass graft (15 days); the procedure with the longest wait time was total knee replacement (178 days). There were also variations in waiting times for these procedures across jurisdictions; Queensland patients waited a median time of 41 days for cataract surgery, while those in Tasmania waited a median time of 389 days.
Source: Australian Parliamentary Library
How can hospital emergency department and surgery waiting times be cut?
Cut doctors pay and hire more?
Create specialised sub-professions without the comprehensive training costs?
Something else?
This seems to me like an instinctually bad idea, although I wouldn't be able to tell you why.
Aside from that, the first thing that comes to mind would be to create an incentive for doing surgeries quickly - the surgeon who's average waiting time is lowest gets a bonus - but that would have very bad, not good, horrible side effects.
This has, I think, the highest potential. One would need to fight against entrenched lobbies and status quo bias, but in theory it would help a lot.
Alternatively, a possibility could be creating a specialized administrative role in hospitals whose sole purpose is to organize doctor's time...but I would be surprised if it didn't already exist.
Probably concerns about quality.