OMA’s Recent Messages to Family Physicians are Disappointing and Misleading

Last week, Alberta, the province that once had a health Minister who went to a physicians house to berate him in person, created a new pay model for their family physicians. Even Alberta, the province whose premier told the health service to not talk about vaccines, realized the obvious. Family physicians need to be paid commensurate to the foundational work they do, and the role they play, in a high functioning health system.

I’ve taken a look at the new Alberta model. Some of the specifics are gated but the rough overall numbers are public. My back of napkin math suggests there is about a 24% increase in gross income for family physicians with a practice size of 1200. This includes payments for indirect work (checking labs, reviewing reports, supervising staff – all the admin work that Ontario refuses to recognize) and increased payments for more complex patients. I congratulate my colleagues in Alberta on this accomplishment. It WILL stabilize not only family medicine, but their whole health care system.

In response OMA CEO Kimberly Moran sent out an email on Friday Dec 20th. (A complete guess on my part is that she saw some of the responses to this deal on Social Media). I personally was offended (but not surprised) by the manipulation of figures and data in her email. While it’s true that every thing she wrote in the email was technically correct, the manner in which it was presented created an impression of successes that just aren’t there when it comes to advocating for family physicians.

OMA CEO Kimberly Moran

I hate to talk numbers, this stuff gets confusing. But here’s a short set of data you need to know (numbers rounded for simplicity).

  • 2022/23 is the BASE YEAR for all future increases negotiated/arbitrated going forward
  • The 2022/23 physicians budget was $16 billion
  • For 2023/24 (the last year of the previous agreement) the OMA negotiated a 2.8% ($448 million) increase
  • for 2024/25 the Arbitrator awarded us 9.95% compounded to the 2.8% from 2023/24 – which winds up being 13.03% more than the BASE YEAR ($2.08 Billion more than 2022/23)

So what’s the problem? Well for starters Ms. Moran states that the OMA “successfully” advocated for a 9.95% increase without mentioning that the OMA asked for 22.9%. Getting less than half of what you ask for is successful? But more importantly she went on to tell family physicians that they will receive a higher increase than the arbitration award of 9.95%. (11.75 – 13.54% depending on the practice model). But here’s the thing, the arbitration award was the increase for one year only (2024/25). The increase that family doctors are getting is an increase from the BASE YEAR (2022/23) – so it reflects your increase for two years not one like the arbitration award. The two year increase to the physicians budget is, as mentioned above 13.02%.

Now I completely respect the fact that the numbers that I’m quoting do not reflect the fact that the the award is meant to be split 70/30 between fee increases and targeted funds (but neither did Ms. Moran’s email!!). A very brief summary of how targeted funds are supposed to work:

  • 70% of the $2.08 billion are supposed to go to fee increases ($1.456 billion)
  • the other 30% is supposed to be targeted ( $624 million)
  • of the $1.456 billion, 25% ($364 million) is supposed to go to across the board (ATB) increases for everybody. Crunching the numbers means everyone gets a 2.27% increase to their 2022/23 (BASE YEAR) income. The rest of the increase is based on relativity. Ophthalmologists for example get an additional 0.18% for relativity, and family doctors get between 9.48 – 11.27% additional for relativity. But again – that’s the increase for TWO YEARS, whereas the 9.95% was just for the one year.

This type of sophistry in messaging from the OMA regarding family medicine is sadly all too common. For example, the OMA has said that Ontario Family doctors have the highest capitation rates in Canada. Is that statement true? Of course it is. BUT – what’s also true is that no other province has deductions for outside use. Also, at a bare minimum family physicians in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Alberta and Manitoba (with Manitoba being on top) pay family physicians more. Maybe Nova Scotia as well. Ignoring that while trumpeting higher overall capitation payments is unsettling.

While I sadly did expect such sleight of hand over numbers from OMA central, I must admit I was very disappointed in the SGFP email that came shortly thereafter. The SGFP has recently really gotten quite a bit stronger at advocating for family doctors and done some good work. But even they sadly fell into the trap when SGFP Chair Dave Barber told members in his letter:

“…Family doctors will receive increases greater than the 9.95% arbitration award announced earlier this year”.

David Barber – Chair of the Section of General and Family Practice

Again, technically a true statement, but very inappropriate. I don’t know what he was thinking signing off on that.

The really sad thing is that it didn’t have to be this way. The OMA (and SGFP) could have been completely forthright and honest and simply laid out the facts as I did above. This still shows family doctors getting a relativity bump more than a lot of other specialties. And they could have said that they want a good chunk of the targeted funds to go to Family Medicine but the government continues to fight them. Finally, they could have blamed the government for not recognizing the seriousness of the crisis. All of that still would have talked about the positive work being done, without creating the impression that they were trying to hoodwink the members. But alas……

What can we done? Well, I’ve said it many times before. Only the members can change the OMA if they want to. This year in particular, four physician members are up for election for Board Director – which represents half of all the physician positions. There are also multiple candidates running for SGFP executive positions. This really represents the best opportunity in a long time to continue to change the culture at the OMA so that we don’t get disingenuous messaging like this.

I’ll have my thoughts on the election in an upcoming blog.

Dr. Elaine Ma Case is Proof Ontario is Unfriendly to Physicians

Last week, the Ontario Health Sector Appeal and Review Board (HSARB) denied the appeal by Dr. Elaine Ma in her fight against the Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP). At the risk of upsetting Dr. Ma and many (? all) of my colleagues, that decision actually was legally appropriate. HSARB can’t actually look at whether a case is reasonable or not, their job is to go by what’s written in bulletins/updates. The real affront to physicians is that it should never ever have gotten here in the first place.

The Background

For non-physicians reading this, here is a condensed summary of what happened. It’s 2020. The Covid pandemic is raging. Ontario Premier Doug Ford appoints General Rick Hillier to oversee the Covid Vaccination program. He’s tasked with, as Ford calls it, “the largest vaccine rollout in a generation, a massive logistical undertaking, the likes of which this province has never seen.” Hillier’s stated goal? To get shots in everyone’s arms by August 2021.

Dr. Elaine Ma from Kingston realizes the need to act quickly to help her community. She organizes outdoor mass vaccination clinics. Over 35,000 shots were given and Kingston became the most vaccinated area of the province. Dr. Ma was given an Award of Excellence by the Ontario College of Family Physicians for her efforts.

Picture of an outdoor vaccination clinic found elsewhere on the web

The Dispute with OHIP

So what happened? For the Covid vaccine clinics, there were two sets of billing codes assigned. The first was a standard hourly rate. This was meant for physicians who attend a vaccine clinic and perform immunizations there. There were numerous such clinics set up by hospitals/public health/pharmacies and so on. Those agencies paid for the setup costs of those clinics. The physician just showed up and vaccinated.

The second set of codes is used by physicians who give vaccinations in clinics they set up. These codes pay somewhat more, but they’re meant to compensate physicians for the fact that they have to cover all the overhead in those clinics.

Dr. Ma would have had to make sure that things like electricians were hired to ensure that there was power and Internet access outdoors. She may have needed to arrange for commercial grade outdoor tents. Propane heaters to heat the tents and the propane might have been needed. Some staff were paid (others volunteered). All of this organizational work, and figuring out payments, needed to be done in advance. She did it.

She therefore billed OHIP the second code. This is entirely reasonable given the circumstances and the work she did.

So what happened?

The sudden increase in billings did not go unnoticed by OHIP and was flagged. This is absolutely appropriate. As taxpayers, we need to be sure that there is a mechanism to catch outlying bills. The anomaly was sent for review by the various bureaucrats at OHIP. Also appropriate.

So what went wrong?

Basically everything after that. The OHIP bureaucrats reviewed the situation. As pointed out by Perry Brodkin (OHIPs former lawyer, who was quoted extensively in the Kingstonist) – the information was sent “up the hierarchy” and would have reached the deputy health minister and minister.

The bureaucrats and health minister decided she didn’t qualify for the codes. The reasons given (see the Kingstonist articles for more details) change at a whim. First it was that the clinic was outdoors not inside (you mean at a time when we are all social distancing – we should have crammed unrelated people into a clinic to immunize them??). Then it was that medical students were used (despite the strong endorsement of using medical students by the then Dean of Queen’s University Medical School, Dr. Jane Philpott). Then it was that she paid people to work there.

Dr. Jane Philpott – former Dean of Queen’s University Medical School – and a strong supporter of the vaccination clinics set up by Dr. Ma

Then things got ugly

And finally, after repeated questioning by the Kingsonist, things got really ugly when Hannah Jensen, the communications director for the Minister of Health issues a statement alleging that Dr. Ma “pocketed” the funds. This basically amounted to an allegation of theft by Dr. Ma and was widely viewed as a disgusting, immoral and reprehensible comment in the medical community. Even the Kingstonist was alarmed by this and called the statement “rife with allegations.”

Hannah Jensen, Communications Director for Minister of Health Sylvia Jones (photo from LinkedIn Profile page)

Why this offends doctors so much.

Let’s be clear about this. There is zero tolerance in the broader medical community for misappropriation of funds/intentional fraudulent OHIP billing. Zilch. Nada. But there is a recognition that the imperfect OHIP billing schedule needs to be interpreted with reason, especially when times are unreasonable (and what could possibly be a more unreasonable time than a once in a lifetime pandemic?).

Dr. Ma did all the work to meet the billing criteria (even the OHIP bureaucrats were forced to admit that yes, over 35,000 shots were given and yes she had planned and organized the whole thing). The fact that she did it outside and had medical students help when some 20 year old pre pandemic memos said not to is an unwarranted use of a technicality.

For many physicians, this brings back memories of when another set of bureaucrats persecuted physicians. They even told one paediatric respirologist that in order to bill a code, he had to perform rectal and pelvic exams on children!

What does this mean for Ontario Health care?

First, as Dr. Ma herself pointed out, it is now illegal for physicians to bill any procedures that they delegated to medical students. This means that medical teaching will effectively grind to a halt. Why would any doctor teach a medical student to say, suture a wound, when that doctor would now be financially penalized?

Second, this story has made the national press. It has also been reported in Canadian Journals that cater to physicians and other health care workers. The message to them is clear. Do NOT think of relocating/starting up a practice in Ontario. You will be treated grossly unfairly by the bureaucrats and health minister and there will be no reasonable interpretation of the rules.

What can be done?

According to Brodkin, Health Minister Sylvia Jones and Premier Doug Ford can direct OHIP to disregard the HSARB ruling. They need to do so immediately. However, because politicians only think of re-election, and not what is right, Dr. Ramsey Hijazi, the founder of the Ontario Union of Family Physicians wants to up the pressure on them.

Dr. Ramsey Hijazi, founder of the Ontario Union of Family Physicians – pictured inset.

His group has set up a petition that clearly demands that justice be done in this case. It demands that the Minister and Premier disregard the HSARB ruling. We need to support our health care heroes not penalize them on technicalities in outdated bulletins.

I urge all of my followers to sign the petition. If this case is allowed to go on, trust me on this, there will be negative consequences for health care in Ontario, and we don’t need any more of those.

Click here to sign the petition.

Sunday Snippets: Dec 1, 2024 (ft. Bonnie Crombie, Vaccines, Microplastics and more)

Item: More and more family doctors are turning to AI scribes to reduce their workload. Many physicians in the article state time saving is the main driver for adopting these scribes.

My thoughts: I’m piloting an AI scribe right now with my Health Team. It can reduce the number of hours spent on paperwork. However, one does need to review the note dictated to ensure it’s accurate (a few examples of mistakes so far). The notes also tend to be wordier than my own notes. Finally, it’s really important to review the examination section of the notes – as the scribe has no way of knowing what a patient “looks like” and it’s up to you to ensure accuracy.

There are of course some privacy concerns. That’s why I like the fact that the scribe I’m using is not integrated into my Electronic record. That way the patients name/date of birth/health card/other identifying information does not get sent into the ether when the scribe generates a note.

My hope is the government settles on one scribe (after appropriate vetting) and pays for all physicians to use it. This will have significant positive benefits for health care.

Item: Ontario Liberal Party Leader Bonnie Crombie has launched her first campaign ad. She blames current Conservative Premier Doug Ford for the shortage of Family Physicians.

My thoughts: It’s a bit rich for the Liberals to blame the current government for the doctor shortage when most of the problems with family medicine began during their tenure. But, just as federal/national elections are won based on the cost of living/inflation (the big reason why Trump won), provincial elections in Canada are often lost based on how the current government is managing health care. And this truly is Doug Ford’s Achilles heel.

I know it seems like Ford’s handlers have him convinced that he can win a third term if only he calls an early election. But the blunt reality is that an early election call will be viewed as cynical even by people who will vote for him. Similarly the $200 Ontario “rebate” cheques are going to be viewed as a bribe.

Will Ford win a third term? I don’t know. But I doubt it will be as easy as he or his handlers think. He really needs to take some significant steps between now and the spring on health care. If only some would give him advice, and on more than one occasion.

Item: We’ve all heard about the rise in measles cases across the country and in the U.S. It seems that now Whooping Cough is also on the rise.

My thoughts: Jeez. Get vaccinated and get your kids vaccinated already people.

Item: On that note, it seems very few adults in the United States are getting updated Covid/Flu and RSV vaccines, even in high risk populations like nursing homes.

My thoughts: Life expectancy in the United States continues to fall. These two articles are not unrelated.

Item: Microplastics have now been found in the human brain.

My thoughts: Not nearly enough attention is being paid to this story. There are significant red flags for the harm that microplastics can do to human health including increasing the risk of dementia/heart disease/stroke and reducing fertility and sexual function. While it’s true that most of the studies raising alarm have been in labs or in animal models that don’t give a complete picture of the effect on humans, there are just too many concerns to ignore. We need an urgent review of microplastics (along with a review of all the processed garbage in the North American diet).

Item: A great article in the Annals of Family Medicine shows that when your doctor is away, there is LESS downstream use of ER and associated health care costs if you see a doctor in the same group practice than in a walk in clinic.

My thoughts: This is yet another reason why expansion of scope of allied health professionals is a bad idea. Rather than getting your care fragmented between health care workers who don’t have your full health history – the ideal is to support your family doctor to make sure whoever is covering can see that information, to give you better care. And on that note….

Item: Ontario is going to allow the further expansion of scope of nurse practitioners. PEI is going to allow physiotherapists to order X-rays.

My thoughts: Go read the article from Annals of Family Medicine above. This move (to expand scope) will eventually be shown to have been a big mistake.

Item: Excellent (and unusual for the Trillium – ungated) article on the aging population of family physicians in Ontario and what it could mean for the future.

My thoughts: None of this is surprising. Four of the five doctors in my clinic are late 50s or older. We are heading for a real problem if we don’t immediately support family medicine now.

Item: I somehow missed this but it seems that Australia just had its worst flu season on record.

My thoughts: I wrote this in 2017 warning that our health care system couldn’t handle a bad flu season. The situation is worse now. I don’t know what the flu season will be like, but if it’s a bad one we will see a proliferation of horror stories about health care. At the risk of sounding like a broken record – get your flu shot people. Keep yourself safe.

Yours truly getting his flu shot this year.

That’s it for this week. I’m away next week. Might have a blog later on a specific issue that is making Ontario an undesirable location to practice medicine. Back in two weeks with more snippets.

Sunday Snippets: Nov 24, 2025

Another in a weekly series of brief snippets of health care stories that bemused, intrigued and otherwise beguiled me over the past week along with my random thoughts on the matter.

Item: Dr. Sarah Giles writes in the CBC about how she was forced to cut her hours because of the burnout.

My thoughts: Kudos to Dr. Giles for talking so openly about this. Alarmingly few of my colleagues are willing to talk about burnout and how the system is affecting them. Instead they suffer in private, and that’s not healthy for them OR the patients they serve. It’s an important story that needs to be told over and over again.

Item: “Involuntary medical treatment” for people with addiction issues seems to be all the rage. A great article in the “Conversation” shows that this won’t solve anything, and in fact will make things worse.

My thoughts: I really can’t believe we are even discussing this. It has been well known for…..well forever, that people will not get better unless they want to seek help. We have to focus on making seeking help easier, not forcing them.

Item: The always excellent Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, who most of my colleagues know as a superb voice of reason and information during the height of the Covid pandemic, writes about her feelings now that RFK junior has been nominated to lead Health and Human Services in the United States.

My thoughts: My heart goes out to her and all the hard work staff who have tried keep us all safe during the pandemic. They deserve better.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a leading American Anti-Vax conspiracy theorist, now tapped to head Health and Human Services in the United States

Item: TV Ontario had a segment suggesting that foreign trained physicians could help tackle Ontario’s physician shortage.

My thoughts: I’ll shout it out again, we already have enough family doctors in Ontario who are already licensed to practice medicine in this province and are familiar with the Ontario Health Care system. The number is approximately 6,000 or so (see the graphs in the linked blog for details). Can we just not make it easier to practice family medicine instead??? If we can get even 1/3 of those doctors already in Ontario to start a practice, we would end this crisis.

Item: Great article on the physician gender wage gap in Health Debate. Clearly shows that the gap is real and needs to be corrected.

My thoughts: One of the best accomplishments of the OMA Board when I was on it was to publish the gender pay gap report. It was arguably too late, but I believe we were the first PTMA to discuss this and to use that as a basis for future negotiations work. While I’ve had some issues with how negotiations have been handled since, I am quite comfortable in saying that positions of the OMA in negotiations would take this into account and that there is likely to be funds demanded to narrow this gap. The blame for the fact that there has been no progress on this lies mostly at the feet of the Ministry of Health. We don’t have an agreement yet on how to divide the arbitration award – and that means the Ministry is not responding to OMA proposals that would close this gap. Shame on them.

Item(s): Alberta announced that it hiring a large number of nurse practitioners to become “primary care providers” to patients who don’t have a family doctor.

My thoughts: The National Health System (NHS) in Britain is under fire for the fact that it too tried to replace the work done by fully trained physicians, with staff who were likely well intentioned, but had less qualifications. It turns out there is significant risk to this, and likely a markedly increase cost in providing health care. The article “My wife died because the NHS used cheap labour” should be, in my opinion, required reading for any politician/health care bureaucrat who thinks they can provide better care by using less trained people.

That’s all for this week. Back next week (probably) with more.

Bureaucratic Vertigo in Ontario’s Home Care System

Bureaucratic vertigo in Ontario’s home care system, exacerbated by ineffective reforms and rebranding, has led to chaos and service stagnation, necessitating genuine engagement with frontline providers for meaningful transformation.

Dr. Merritt Cade (not their real name) is a concerned and experienced Ontario physician familiar with the current crisis in home care. Dr. Cade is worried about potential blowback from this blog that will affect their patients and so this blog is posted under a pseudonym.

Vertigo is a sensation where one perceives movement that isn’t happening. In the realm of healthcare administration, a similar phenomenon occurs—bureaucratic vertigo—an organizational dizziness that mimics change but leaves structures and systems untouched. Nowhere is this more glaring than in Ontario’s home care sector, a pivotal yet neglected component of our healthcare system.

In 2023, amid promises of reform, the Ontario government introduced Bill 135, the “Convenient Care at Home Act,” envisioning a streamlined home care service managed by Ontario Health atHome (OHAH). OHAH itself was to now be brought under the umbrella of Ontario Health, the implementation arm of the Ministry of Health. Hopes were pinned on this transformation bringing ease and efficiency. However, the reality has been a déjà vu of previous cycles of centralization and decentralization of health care structures, with patients and families shouldering the consequences.

Nowhere is the bureaucratic vertigo more evident than in the successive re-branding of home care over the last 8 years from “Community Care Access Centres (CCAC)” to “Local Health Integration Networks (LHINs)” in 2017 to “Home and Community Care Support Services (HCCSS)” in 2021, to the latest iteration, “Ontario Health atHome (OHAH)” in 2024. Meanwhile, regardless of the name used, the services provided by the home care system remained untouched.

Ontario Health and OHAH’s first substantive move—renegotiating contracts for medical supplies—illustrates how bureaucratic vertigo can lead to harmful consequences. Instead of solving issues, the new contract process disconnected decision-makers from frontline realities. The result? A severe shortage of medical suppliesmedication delays, and a burden placed on already overwhelmed caregivers and families. Despite clear warnings from supply companies, these decisions disregarded frontline input, leaving healthcare providers to navigate chaos without support.

OHAH’s own front-line staff, the beleaguered Care Coordinators, were also caught completely off guard as rules regarding medications and catalogues of supplies changed overnight. Care Coordinators are the quarterbacks of the home care system, matching services to patients’ needs. What OHAH and Ontario Health did was akin to completely changing the playbook on their quarterbacks and teams, with sadly predictable results.

Despite all this, however, home care holds immense potential to address systemic challenges, from reducing ER congestion and the alternate level of care logjam to facilitating dignified end-of-life care at home instead of in hospitals. What is required is not another bureaucratic shuffle, but genuine engagement with those who understand home care’s nuances best: frontline providers. It is they who hold the practical knowledge necessary for meaningful reform.

The path forward demands that decision-making authority be shared with these healthcare professionals. Their experiences can inform policies that work in reality, not just on paper. This means abandoning the “bureaucrat knows best” mentality and embracing trust and collaboration. It means abandoning committees struck merely to check a box that says that frontline professionals were consulted when, in fact, their concerns do not meaningfully contribute to decisions made.

Furthermore, the status quo must not define future transformations. Further substantial changes to home care delivery, this time relating to the supply of equipment such as hospital beds, wheelchairs, walkers and other essential aids, was planned for rollout in October but has been delayed until January. Without a change in approach, we should expect similar upheaval when this takes place. Past failures demonstrate that superficial organizational changes do not equate to operational improvements. Genuine progress relies on a foundational renewal of leadership and strategy, prioritizing empathy, accountability, and proactive stakeholder engagement.

If we are to lift Ontario’s home care from its current crisis, change must be substantive, rooted in the insights of those who deliver care day-in, day-out. We must move beyond the spectre of bureaucratic vertigo and commit to sensible, informed solutions that truly benefit patients and families across the province. By trusting, listening to and involving the frontline, we can stop the spin and start the real work of reform.

We Know How to Save Family Medicine. Why Aren’t We Doing It?

I’m honoured to have Dr. Mark Linder guest blogging for me today. I first met Dr. Linder during our time advocating against Dr. Eric Hoskins unilateral cuts to health care. He’s exceptionally well spoken and articulate . He’s a former ER doctor and now full time family physician and clinic owner. His other claim to fame is that got fired from the Kaplan MCAT teaching course after one session – which apparently was a first.

I just wrote this in a flurry this morning. I see stupider and stupider proposals from the government and from newspaper editorials. I see our new grads learn from their teachers that they need to stay away from this job. I then see the  domino effect this has on recruitment, job satisfaction and reinforced by absurd government initiatives to save the system. I watch the OMA get pulled in every direction to try and please everyone. So apologies in advance -this is just my take really-and mostly to get it off my chest-not that it will lead anywhere. So thanks for reading.

The Family Health Organization (FHO) is what saves family medicine. It has done it before and it can do it again.

In 2006 something unprecedented happened. It hasn’t happened before or since. And perhaps we didn’t quite appreciate how unique it was. The provincial Liberal government, under Dalton McGuinty and Health Minister George Smitherman, introduced an upgraded payment model for Family Medicine. It built on the existing capitation based Family Health Network (FHN) model to enhance it.

What was so unique about this? It stands out as one of the only times a government has thought beyond their 4 year term to the ultimate health of their population as well as their economy down the road when they may no longer be in power.  Sure, it was going to make them look good if everyone got a family doctor out of it-but it was a big expensive risk, a risk based on an assumption that family medicine was critical to the system, AND that practitioners need to be paid fairly for their work if they wish to retain these doctors in the future. A different time to be sure!

It worked. Look at the stats from 2008 to 2018. Look at how many Family Doctors gladly embraced the new system. Look how the number of orphaned patients dropped. 

The system had flaws. I mean this was the second iteration of what was described as an experiment. The “outside use” enforcement rule made little sense in most cases. The calculation of capitation payments wasn’t always a fair representation of how much work it took to look after the patient in front of you. Certain “in the basket” fees were bizarre and should never have been part of the package.  Doctors were actually more incentivized to send people to the ER over a walk in clinic!!! But all in all, it was a great innovation, a great idea, and saved family medicine. It also, no doubt saved the province millions in treatment dollars and ER visits as family doctors made themselves available to look after patients.

And then, In 2015 Kathleen Wynne and Eric Hoskins, the health minister at the time, effectively shut down enrollment in FHOs And that was the beginning of the end. I presume they just wanted to control the immediate budget – paying for family medicine up front meant huge savings down the road. But it resulted in a pretty big chunk of budget going out the door NOW. And the Wynne liberals didn’t have a health care crisis, didn’t heed the warnings that we as physicians laid out pretty starkly at the time, and decided, nah, we’ll just “pause” the experiment.

Which they did. And the fall out was obvious. As a clinic owner and a family doctor, I had a front row seat.  The residents and new grads had all been trained in the new system, and now were unable to access it. If they wanted to work, they’d be taking a tremendous risk setting up a clinic in a Fee For Service environment using a Schedule of Benefits that had failed to keep up with inflation for 20 years. They were screwed.  The aging Family Doctor population continued to retire at a predictable rate, and the aging population continued to get more desperate to find doctors with increasing difficulty.

By the time the FHO’s opened up again in 2021, it barely mattered–The reputation of family medicine among new grads had been thrashed for 6 years. 
With the new rules, new grads would have to gather 6 like-minded individuals (instead of just 3 like in the old days), or find a bigger FHO that was already established and could fit them in. Not so easy. Opening up your own shop had become increasingly more expensive with post pandemic inflation, so the debt would be crippling just to get started if you wanted your own clinic. And these are graduates who already had a huge amount of debt coming out of school.

Couple this with the insane increase in administrative burden as we become more and more efficient at having hospitals and labs forward us copies of paperwork. In theory, amazing, in practice hugely burdensome, time consuming and unpaid. Arguably, if the FHO rates had increased at the level of inflation, there’d be no complaints about this additional work. But the FHO rates had more or less remained static relative to the cost of doing business. Still better than FFS, still paid a lot less than the actual market value of doing the job as proven by the lack of uptake that continues today.

The thing is: The FHO is still the answer. It absolutely needs some significant tweaks. The rates need to go up. The outside use concept needs to go. Minimum size and shared EMR requirement needs to be softened so that smaller groups can join together in nearby geographic areas. Some sort of separate funding will be essential to help clinic owners to keep up with inflation.  But it still achieves by far the best mix of physician autonomy, clinic management, and long term government savings. And it’s evidence-based! We have a recent history we can look back on to demonstrate efficacy!

Other solutions, such as having lesser-trained individuals diagnosing and managing patients give the appearance of short term gains at a huge future cost as more referrals to specialists are made and more referrals to the ER are made. Another concept of having government run all clinics is clearly so expensive as to be dead at the gates-Doctors currently pay for rent, administration and their own retirements out of their incomes. It’s not great for us, but it’s a heck of a lot cheaper for the taxpayer to do it that way, and simply pay the doctors more.

I recognize that my FFS colleagues are not helped at all by an enhancement and advocacy for the FHO approach. And I’m sorry. I obviously think there’s a lot of work that could be done to improve FFS rules and individual payments. No doubt.


But we actually have the evidence that the FHO saved family medicine when it was introduced. It was stunningly effective, and if nursed back to health, will absolutely work again.

Sunday Snippets – November 3, 2024

Another in a weekly series of brief snippets of health care stories that bemused, intrigued and otherwise beguiled me over the past week along with my random thoughts on the matter.

Item: AI is now inventing things no one ever said. It turns out that AI can “hallucinate” (no really, that’s what they are calling it). Apparently the AI invents commentary that includes things like racial comments/violent rhetoric (!) and even medical mis- diagnoses.

My thoughts: My group is actually looking at AI to help with our Admin burden. While the technology shows promise – this is a useful reminder that we should all read what software generates before logging off. You will probably still save some time, just not as much as hoped.

Item: A new lung cancer vaccine that uses mRNA technology is entering trials. Somewhat ironically, this is what mRNA technology was being studied before the COVID pandemic, and its use for the COVID vaccines. The technology shows great promise to greatly reduce the side effects of cancer treatment, and provide more targeted therapy.

My thoughts: The “vaccine” term is probably going to need refining, because it’s not really preventing lung cancer (which is what most people associate with the term vaccine). Additionally, social media is still awash in mis-information about mRNA technology. So probably better to avoid that term. But at the end of the day I would agree what we are really in a remarkable time for cancer therapy with so many new treatments available. (Still better not to get cancer of course – so if you do smoke – quit!).

Item: Dr. Elaine Ma, a physician who went over and above the call of duty to organize mass vaccination clinics in the Kingston area at the height of the Covid Pandemic is asked to pay back the billings generated during those clinics. (Note I did not say income – Dr. Ma would have used a good portion of those billings to pay staff, supplies and other overheads).

My thoughts: I’ve been (frequently) told I’m too hard on bureaucrats in health care. That I come across as somewhat insulting and “un-presidential” when I complain about them. And every time I think to myself “I really need to take a deep breath and be hard on the problem, not the people” – along comes yet another example of rigid bureaucratic thinking and frankly bureaucratic stupidity that I wind up reverting to my old habits. I will say this, the residents of the Kingston area are a whole lot better off because of Dr. Ma , and the sooner the OHIP bureaucrats get this, the better. As for the OMA’s silence on the matter, it’s pretty disappointing.

Addendum: after writing this blog the OMA has confirmed that they have been helping behind the scenes. I’m glad to hear that they have been helping Dr. Ma, but I would state for the sake of their members that they need to be SEEN to be helping….

Item: The Registered Nurses Association of Ontario blasted the government for not embracing nurses as a central to solving the primary care crisis.

My thoughts: I admire the RNAO for advocating for their members (no really, that’s kind of what a member organization is supposed to do). They’re wrong of course. Using Nurse Practitioners to replace physicians (as opposed to complementing them) will only massively drive up the cost of health care and worsen outcomes. But unlike certain organizations- see above – the RNAO stands up for its members.

Item: Walking pneumonia rates in the United States – and probably Canada – are spiking, particularly in young children.

My thoughts: It’s always awful to see children sick, and as clinicians we should be on the look out for this. BUT – thankfully the vast majority of cases appear to be mild, and if treated appropriately people are recovering. They may have a persistent cough for several weeks – but they are getting better.

Item: Collingwood’s newest physician says that the profession is endangered until the province ante’s up better pay. Disclosure – Dr. Ladda has joined my Family Health Organization and I feel we are lucky to have him.

My thoughts: Read my full blog tomorrow – written by a guest blogger so at least it will be coherent.

Item: A columnist in the Ottawa Citizen basically says that Premier Ford is outsourcing the family medicine problem.

My thoughts: A good friend of mine says it much, much better than I could. “We need the political leadership to step beyond name calling and giving token titles to people to win an election. If you want this province to thrive, rebuild and lead Canada again, it requires more than what we have seen for 20 years from ALL political parties .”

That’s it for this week’s Sunday Snippets. As mentioned above, watch out for a really superb guest blog tomorrow on how to fix family medicine.

Sunday Snippets – Oct. 27, 2024

I was away last week but I’m back with another in a weekly series of brief snippets of health care stories that bemused, intrigued and otherwise beguiled me over the past week along with my random thoughts on the matter.

Item: There was significant growth in the number of physicians in Alberta in the third quarter.

My Thoughts: Alberta is kind of a funny province. There are some very strange goings on with their health care policy. But it can’t be denied that despite all of that, if you provide incentives to attract younger physicians it will help. Having said that, it can all be easily undone if they don’t get on with it and implement the compensation for family physicians they promised, and for some reason appears to be delayed.

Item: The province of Nova Scotia has launched a physicians retirement fund initiative, helping physicians to retire well.

My Thoughts: What’s that you say? You mean ensuring that physicians have peace of mind about their retirement might actually help recruit (gasp!) and even retain (double gasp!!) physicians? Who would have thunk it?? In all seriousness, given the way the Federal Liberal government of our effete Prime Minister really screwed physicians with the recent tax law changes – this is a necessary move and I hope will get copied by all provinces. It really will help improve morale and reduce some of the burnout.

Item: John Richards and Tingting Zhang, from the CD Howe Institute wrote an op-ed in the Financial Post encouraging more use of nurse practitioners since they can “do almost everything an MD can”.

My Thoughts: El Toro Poo Poo. (This is a PG rated blog so that’s all I could get away with). I work with Nurse Practitioners and I have seen them help patients and I firmly believe they have a role in health care. But that role is not to replace physicians. The studies that show they can “do almost everything” are done based on what scope of practice suggests they can do. The blunt reality is nurse practitioners drive up costs and worsen care if used in settings as these characters suggest. The studies that show that NPs are cheaper ONLY look at the actual income an NP gets and compare it to a physicians income, as opposed to looking at the work that is actually done/number of patients seen/and number of tests ordered. The FP article isn’t even fit to be used for toilet paper.

Item: The crisis in Home Care supplies, first reported by Avis Favaro on X (formerly Twitter) continues. Home care nurses are reporting heartbreaking stories of patients buying their own supplies on Amazon since home care couldn’t provide them. Dr. Drew Moore and Dr. Hal Berman should be lauded for going public with their concerns. (I’ve met both of them and they are both mensches).

My Thoughts: I’m old. I’ve seen a lot of government screw ups in my time, especially in health care. But I have yet to see bureaucrats who screw up be truly held accountable and fired. Ever. They just get shuffled off to some other department. It it too much to ask that if someone makes a mistake at their job (and this is a BIG one) they get held accountable?

Item: Quebec is attacking family doctors for some reason. First they suggested they would link people to non-family physicians for care and even remove patients who were “healthy” from their own family physicians. Then they presented erroneous data suggesting that family doctors basically don’t work hard enough.

My Thoughts: There are 9 other provinces and 3 territories that would love to have these doctors.

Item: Penn State Medical Residents unionized, went on strike and got significant benefits (despite being driven off the hospital grounds by hospital security!)

My thoughts: Unionization of physicians is going to happen eventually. Whether through the long gestating Charter Challenge (yes my Ontario peeps – it is still working its way through the courts) or some other mechanism. The younger physicians clearly seem to want this model of representation and at some point in the not too distance future, physicians will be unionized.

Item: The Ontario government announced plans to effectively bar foreign students from attending medical school in Ontario.

My thoughts: My thanks to Am640 News for interviewing me on the topic, and my thoughts on this can be heard below. (This short version – this is populist rhetoric that will do nothing to help with the health care crisis):

My Interview on AM640 About the Current Crisis in Home Care

Was pleased to be interviewed by Ben Mulroney today discussing the current crisis in Home Care in Ontario. Unfortunately, the Ontario Health bureaucrats have really mucked up the process of ordering supplies for vulnerable patients at home, leading to immense suffering for patients at home and their loved ones.

Click below to hear more:

https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/shortage-of-medical-supplies-needs-an-urgent-fix/id1677003384?i=1000673744931

Arbitration Part III: When and How Much Will Docs Get Paid?

Disclaimer: The information is based on my personal analysis and should not be your sole source of information. The payment schedule below is based on what we were told was “PLANNED”. Being a firm believer in “Murphy’s Law“, I would suggest that changes to the below may come at any time. Contact info@oma.org with any questions.

After writing why the Arbitration Award will be bad for patients and doctors, it seems my three loyal readers were unhappy that I couldn’t say when docs would be paid. Being a demure, sensitive, and eager to please sort, I feel compelled to try my best to explain when money is coming.

Once again, my two examples are Drs. Alpine and Valley. Both had 13 years of post secondary education (4 years for a BSc, 4 years for medical school and 5 years for residency). Dr. Alpine does a lot of procedures and can see more patients than he could 20 years ago due to improved technology. Dr. Valley spends a lot of time with intensively sick patients, so she sees the same number of patients as 20 years ago.

What assumptions am I making for the Calculations?

Drs. Alpine and Valley will each provide same number of OHIP services yearly from 2023 – 2026. We have to assume that the entire 2.8 % increase from last year, and the 9.95% award this year will be given across the board (ATB) until April 1, 2025. (The OMA and MOH could reach an agreement on distributing the funds more fairly- but I highly doubt it). We’ll also assume that the schedule for payments the OMA provided at their webinar will be met – I remain very skeptical.

Let’s assume Dr. Alpine billed OHIP an average of $100,000 a month for fiscal 2022/23 and Dr. Valley billed OHIP $30,000 a month. This time period is the base rate for OMA calculations, and hence mine. (Physicians who read this blog can put their average 2022/23 monthly billings into the calculations below to find out their own numbers).

What happened for April 1, 2023 to March 31, 2024?

The OMA and MOH agreed to a 2.8% increase in fees that was to be divided into across the board (ATB) increases and relativity increases. Because the agreement came late, and the OHIP Computers couldn’t be updated (sigh), Drs. Alpine and Valley continued to bill OHIP at the same rate as 2022/23.

What happened on April 1, 2024?

The OHIP computers finally updated to reflect the previous year’s increase. Since the two sides didn’t agree on a relatively formula, the 2.8% was given ATB. Dr. Alpine’s gross income went to $102,800 a month. Dr. Valley’s went to $30,840. Both increases showed up on the May Remittance. Doubtful Dr. Valley even noticed her increase.

What will happen on the Nov. 2024 Remittance ?

Well, finally all the reviewing and rejecting and re-submitting of claims for the year April 1, 2023 to March 31, 2024 will have happened. The computers will then pay the retroactive 2.8% amount of this year to the doctors. Dr. Alpine will get an additional $33,600 (1.028 x $100,000 x 12) on his remittance for retroactive pay. Dr. Valley will get $10,080 (1.028 x $30,000 x 12).

Isn’t there a drop beginning in December 2024?

The increase drops to 2.55% and the funds saved are dedicated to enhancing the Hospital On Call Coverage program (HOCC). Dr. Alpine will now see $102,550 (1.0255 x $100,000 and Dr. Valley will start to get $30, 765 (1.0255 x $30,000).

What happens for the January – March 2025 Remittance Advice?

Allegedly, the OHIP computers will be able to apply the 9.95% increase for this year now (I’ll believe it when I see it). The word “prospective payment” was used in the webinar, but I don’t know what that means. This increase is compounded to the now 2.55% from the previous year. As a result, starting with the January remittance, Dr. Alpine will now get $112,753.73 ( 1.0255 x 1.0995 x $100,000) a month from OHIP. Dr. Valley will be at $33,826.12 a month.

What is supposed to happen on the March 2025 Remittance?

What’s that you say? Wasn’t the 9.95% increase supposed to start on April 1, 2024? So what happened to all that money? Well, according to the OMA you will get a lump sum payment for April to December in the March remittance. Dr. Alpine can expect to see a one time retroactive payment of $89,583. 57 ($112,753.73 that he should have gotten subtracting the $102,800 that he did get, multiplied by 9 months) and Dr. Valley will get $26,875.08. This is in addition to their usual remittance.

OK, What Happens After April 1, 2025?

Well at this point the new ‘permanent’ fees are supposed to kick in. Up until now, everyone has been given ATB increases. Whatever is negotiated or arbitrated, is supposed to start now. However, the base rate will be the 2022/23 rates. In a previous blog, I assumed that we would carry on the process of giving 1/4 of the increase as ATB and 3/4 via relativity. IF this is done (not sure if it will be) then every speciality will get 2.46% (0.7% for last year + 1.75% this year, compounded) plus X percent – with the X varying from speciality to specialty based on relativity.

Let’s assume Dr. Alpine’s speciality got an X=0% and that Dr. Valley’s got X = 17.54%. In that case Dr. Alpine will now get $102,460 a month:

  • $100,000 base rate from 2022/23 x (1.0246 ATB increase + 0 for relativity).

Dr. Valley on the other hand will get $36,000 a month:

  • $30,000 base rate from 2022/23 x (1.0246 ATB +.1754 for relativity).

I imagine Dr. Alpine will be annoyed.

What are the chances of the new fees being ready on April 1, 2025?

Slim to none. Militancy on the part of the MOH and incompetence on the part of bureaucrats in charge of OHIP are two constants as sure as death and taxes.

Um…well what happens to our monthly incomes after April 1, 2025?

I honestly can’t figure that part out (and not for lack of trying). The procedural agreement states:

“Any unexpended portion of the targeted price increases will continue to be paid to physicians as a separate payment on the monthly Remittance Advice until such time as each targeted increase is implemented or unless the parties agree otherwise.” 

This is the part that I think most people have missed (including, frankly, the OMA Board that approved this agreement – and yes I know it was an attempt to get real money in the hands of physicians). It’s one thing to accept 2.8% ATB. But to accept 12.75% ATB (2.55% from last year compounded with 9.95% from this year) is a bit much. You really have to wonder if there wasn’t a fairer way to spend this money, especially with so many Dr. Valley’s struggling. Time will tell what happens here.

Geez old country doctor, all you’ve done is fuzzify the muddification!

I aim to please dear reader. I aim to please.

SPECIAL MESSAGE FOR FAMILY PHYSICIANS ONLY

Those of you who have read my blogs know that I (and many others) are really really upset with College of Family Physicians of Canada for inviting Dr. David Price to be a keynote speaker at the Family Medicine Forum. I view it as a slap in the face to family physicians, given his role on the Ontario Government’s Negotiations Team.

The Ontario Union of Family Physicians would seem to agree with me. They are asking all family physicians to sign the petition below to have Dr. Price removed as a Keynote speaker. PLEASE click on this link to read and I encourage you to sign.