Actually, Ontario Does NOT Have a Shortage of Family Physicians….

You’re probably wondering if I’ve lost my mind. The media is currently littered with stories about how 2.3 million people in Ontario don’t have a family doctor and how that number is expected to double in two years. Family practices are closing down. In Sault Ste Marie – over 10,000 people are about to be orphaned (left without a family doctor). The Ontario Union of Family Physicians just held an event geared towards helping family doctors leave the profession.

How out of touch must I be to make the assertion, as I did on CTV news recently, that we don’t have a shortage of family doctors?

Yours truly on CTV News

Truth be told, there is an important distinction that has to made, which is key to solving the orphaned patient crisis. There are family doctors, and there are family doctors who are willing to work in a comprehensive care family practice like I do. 

According to the Ontario Medical Association (OMA) website, there are over 15,000 members of the Section of General and Family Practice. These doctors have got their medical licence, are qualified to practice in Ontario, and are able to practice family medicine without any further regulatory hurdles (like getting foreign doctors licensed would entail). There are likely many more as some doctors with a family practice billing licence don’t choose a section – but let’s go with 15,000.

What’s really telling is that only about 9,300 are in what’s called a PEM (Practice Enrolment Model – where a formal agreement exists to run a family practice). The number that are in Fee For Service alone (without an agreement) but still run a practice, is likely only a couple of hundred. So at most we have 9,500 comprehensive care family doctors. The other 5,500+ do something else (hospital only work, clinical associate work, walk in, etc).

From the OMA website. PEM + APP is about 9,300. This would be the number of docs with a formal agreement to run a family practice. 

There’s a myriad of reasons why comprehensive family practice is so unappealing, but let’s look at the two main ones.

1)Decreasing net incomes over the years. It is of course, unpopular to talk about the money doctors make. The OMA has historically felt that the general public views doctors as “fat cats” and “part of the rich elite.” So they’ve shied away from talking about physicians incomes or trying to positively frame that discussion – with predictable results.

As Boris Kralj (PhD in Economics, Adjunct Asst. Prof at McMaster and former Staff at the OMA) points out, net income for family physicians has fallen drastically over the past 20 years.

My thanks to Dr. Kralj for allowing me to share his graph.

2) Increasing Admin Burden. I think everybody has heard how family doctors now spend up to 19 hours a week doing administrative work, ON TOP of the time they spend seeing patients. This work is unpaid of course (there is no fee code for admin work). On a personal note, in about 2004, my office, which was already electronic, got a vpn (virtual private network). This allowed me to connect to he office from anywhere in the world. Initially, I thought it was great. I would go on vacation, spend 20 minutes a day taking care of messages and when I got back from vacation – I would not have the backlog of messages to deal with. 

This past summer, I went on a hiking trip with one of my sons. He pointed out that I was now spending over two hours a day going through labs and messages. Essentially, family doctors don’t have any vacation now. I don’t care what your job is or who you are, a life without any breaks is unsustainable.

Me last summer, by a lake, on vacation, checking my office messages and lab work (dummy chart)

What can be done about this? How does one make family medicine more appealing? This may rub some people the wrong way but the first step is simple. Pay family physicians more. In Ontario, the most common fee billed by a family physician is about $37. (The last time I got a haircut, I paid $40). Out of that $37 the family doctor has to pay their nurse, receptionist, rent, cleaning, supplies and so on. Gets used up pretty quickly. 

Additionally, you need to pay physicians for admin work. If there is 19 hours of admin work that needs to be done – it’s only fair that work is paid for. There are people who are skeptical this will work. To them I would point out that British Columbia has gotten 700 more family doctors since increasing the pay to family physicians. 

You mean if you increase the income for a job, more people will apply for it? Who knew?

B.C. isn’t even the province that pays physicians the most. That’s arguably, as I have written before, Manitoba. Saskatchewans new deal is also much better than what Ontario offers.

The second aspect is to reduce the admin burden for all physicians. Many experts suggest this is a process that will take time. They are the same experts that oversaw the increase in Admin work for physicians with “oh it’s just one extra click or it’s just a simple form”. 

To reduce the Admin burden significantly, one needs to drastically revamp digital health care. Get rid of eHealth Ontario and OntarioMD, and run all decisions through the Digital Health Branch of the Ministry of Health. It’s too late to unify all of our electronic medical records, but you can approve one (and only one) patient app that will allow patients to access and transfer their records to the physician of their choice to reduce duplication and waste. That’s the kind of bold steps that we need to take, not just crowing about the fact that doctors don’t have to sign hearing aid forms any more.

Look we already have 5,500 licensed family physicians in Ontario able to open up a practice. If 40 per cent did so, it would end this crisis immediately without having to resort to years long plans of modifying licensing and training requirements for foreign graduates (who in fairness are generally very good).

Do our leaders have the boldness and vision to do the right thing?

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Author: justanoldcountrydoctor

Dr. M. S. Gandhi, MD, CCFP. Practicing rural family medicine since 1992. I still have active privileges at the Collingwood Hospital. One Time President of the Ontario Medical Association. Follow me on Twitter: @drmsgandhi

6 thoughts on “Actually, Ontario Does NOT Have a Shortage of Family Physicians….”

  1. In 1986 that $37 fee was $27. Should be at least $60 according to inflation calculators.

    Would like to see how much administrators, OMA staff and Nurses pay have increased since then.

    Like

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