Incentives attract visiting doctors to northern Ontario ERs but they're not sticking around - Action News
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Incentives attract visiting doctors to northern Ontario ERs but they're not sticking around

The Temporary Locum Program has helpedkeepemergency rooms operating in northern Ontario including through the COVID-19 pandemic, but some say it may be working against recruiting efforts that would provide a lasting fix to the doctor shortage.

Temporary Locum Program, renewed last fall, is set to expire at the end of March

A stethoscope drapes around a female doctor's neck
The Temporary Locum Program that offers an incentive to bring doctors to cover emergency room shifts in northern Ontario is set to expire, once again, this time at the end of this month. (The Canadian Press)

The Temporary Locum Program has helpedkeepemergency rooms operating in northern Ontario including through the COVID-19 pandemic, but some say it may be working against recruiting efforts that would provide a lasting fix to the doctor shortage.

The province established the program early into the pandemic. It pays premiums to travelling doctors in northern Ontario with the goal of keeping hospital emergency rooms staffed amid a shortage of family physicians.

The program has beenrenewed several times, the last time in the fall, but it's set to expire again, at the end of this month.

A smiling woman with blonde, chin length hair against a background of birch trees
Ann Fenlon is the medical recruiter and retention co-ordinator for the north Algoma area and includes the Lady Dunn Health Centre, the Wawa Medical Group and the municipality of Wawa. (submitted by Ann Fenlon)

Doctors and administrators across northern Ontario say they still depend on locums to keep emergency rooms open but paying visiting doctors premiums works against them in recruiting full-time doctors to their communities.

Ann Fenlon is the medical recruitment and retention co-ordinator in north Algoma, whichincludes the Lady Dunn Health Centre in Wawa.

She saidthey have three physicians butthe province says there should be seven.

Fenlon said thatat first, she thought the temporary locum program would help recruit doctors, but it hasn't turned out that way.

She saidshe doesn't have any trouble scheduling locums, with a pool of about 40to choose from, butthose doctors show little interest in taking on full-timeresponsibilities.

"What we've found is that locum physicians want to be locum physicians," she said. "They're coming for a reason. They don't want the commitment to a full-time practice. Locuming gives them a good compensation model with no overhead and with maximum flexibility."

Premiums vary according to location

Fenlon said thatin her experience, more newly graduated physicians are also choosing to do locums to gain a breadth of experience and avoid the cost of setting up a permanent practice.

She saidshe'd rather seeMinistry of Healthfunding for premiums to locumsgo to helping doctors set up shop.

Recruitmentis also fizzling in the Matheson, Iroquois Falls and Cochrane area, according to the chief executive officerof the MICs Health Care Group.

Paul Chatelain saidhe gets more doctors asking about the incentive to work in the ER than are interested in full-time opportunities.

"It's one of those things once you have it, it's hard to get rid of it right or hard to let go," he said."We go to recruitment fairs looking to hire physicians or recruit physicians, and the first thing they ask is, 'OK, well what's your hourly rate to get paid for the ER department in your community?'"

Chatelain saidthe premiums vary according to location, but at one of his emergency rooms,it amounts to an additional $75an hour.

Sometimes the cure becomes part of the problem.-Dr. Maurianne Reade, Manitoulin Health Centre, Mindemoya

Dr. Maurianne Reade is a full-time physician at the Manitoulin Health Centre in Mindemoya.

She saidshe and her colleagues depend on locums to keep the ER open and it would be disastrous if the program ended suddenly, but there are inequities.

"It is one of the challenges that if the full-time physicians are compensated at significantly less than what the locums are, it can become a disincentive for locums to choose to establish a rural practice," she said.

"Sometimes the cure becomes part of the problem."

A spokesperson for the Ministry of Health saidthe Ontario government will have more to say about the possible extension of the locum program in the near future.

Theministry saidit continues to work with its partners, including the Ontario Medical Association, on a permanent solution to best support the sector beyond this month.