Horizon replaces 3 out of 4 family doctors who left their practices in Fredericton area - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:16 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Horizon replaces 3 out of 4 family doctors who left their practices in Fredericton area

Three doctors have replaced four family physicians who left their practices in the Fredericton region earlier this year, Horizon Health Network has confirmed.

Physicians will provide needed locum coverage for maternity and sick leaves

Two of the physicians are expected to start their own practices this winter, while the third will be joining Horizon's Gibson Health Centre in Fredericton next year. (Hannah McKay/Reuters/Pool)

Three doctors have replaced four family physicians who left their practices in the Fredericton region earlier this year, Horizon Health Network has confirmed.

In July, the healthauthority said thedoctors each had their own reasons for leaving. The authority also said four new family doctors wereexpected to arrive in the city "sometimethis fall."

The three new physicians are providing needed locum coverage for maternity and sick leaves in the area, according toDr. Edouard Hendriks,vice-president, medical, academic and research affairs forHorizon Health Network.

Once those leaves expire, two of the physicians are expected to starttheir own practices this winter. The third physician will be joining Horizon's Gibson Health Centre in early 2021, a healthcare team that provides primary healthcare services to families in the Fredericton region.

Two additional physicians will be completing their residenciesby June 2021 and are expected to establish practices by July, Hendriks said in an emailed statement to CBC News.

"We are thrilled to welcome these physicians to our community and wish them all the best as they set out on their own paths."

CBC News has asked for an interview with Horizon Health Network and is waiting for a response.

4 doctors leave practices since May

One of the family doctors wasDr. Ann Collins, who lefther post as a family physician in Fredericton to become the next president of the Canadian Medical Association, which advocates on subjects related to national health.

Collins, who has been a family physician for more than 20 years, has more than 3,000 patients in the Fredericton area who will be seeking a family doctor.

The other three family physicians are Dr. Jacques Bland, Dr. Achla Pond and Dr. Sunita MacMullin, who stopped working in Frederictonin April to work full-timein Sussex.

In 2018, MacMullinleft her practicebecause of alack of "on-call" support from other doctors in her family physician group.She later returned to her practice and alternated weekly visits in Fredericton and Sussex.

According to the province, MacMullinbilled just under $1.7 million during the fiscal year ended March31, 2019 leading the list of top billers in New Brunswick, ahead of radiologists.

MacMullinsaid shewastoldby the Department of Health she had too many patients, which was prohibiting her fromprovidingproper care.

Thousands of patients waiting for family doctor

Patient Connect NB has a list of more than 15,000patients waiting for a doctor in Zone 3, which covers Fredericton and a large portion of the St. John River Valley.

Last week, CBC News also reported that the Restigouche region has lost four family doctors since May, leaving 5,000 people with no primary health-care provider.

About37,000 people in the province are without a doctor or nurse practitioner.

But finding new doctors isn't easy.

New Brunswick competes with every other province to attract and retain physicians, who are in great demand across Canada.

"The New Brunswick Medical Society is encouraged to hear that three new family physicians have been hired to care for patients in the Fredericton area," said Dr. Chris Goodyear, president of the New Brunswick Medical Society.

"Physician recruitment continues to be a challenge in all regions of New Brunswick and across the country."

Premier Blaine Higgs has promisedto provide $5million to recruit doctors in rural areas and $4.2 million to add nurse practitioners to clinics and emergency rooms.