Would changing how doctors in Canada are licensed help reduce the physician shortage? This MP feels it could - Action News
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Thunder Bay

Would changing how doctors in Canada are licensed help reduce the physician shortage? This MP feels it could

Thunder Bay-Rainy River MP Marcus Powlowski was in Atikokan, Fort Frances, Rainy River and Kenora to learn about the challenges doctors are facing. A member of the parliamentary standing committee on health, he plans to make recommendations aimed at easing the physician shortage in rural northwestern Ontario and other parts of Canada.

Marcus Powloski may recommend national licensure for doctors, fast tracking foreign-trained physicians

The shift vacancy rate at the Lake of the Woods District Hospital emergency department in northwestern Ontario has dropped slightly from 44 per cent in June to 41 per cent at the start of August, CEO Ray Racette says. (Marc Doucette/CBC)

Thunder Bay-Rainy River MP Marcus Powlowski plans to make recommendations to the federal government aimed at easing the physician shortage in rural northwestern Ontario and other parts of Canada.

Powlowski, an emergency departmentphysician and member of the parliamentary standing committee on health, recently visited Atikokan, Fort Frances, Rainy River and Kenora to speak with doctors about the challenges they're facing.

Rural hospitals across the province, including in the northwest, have been struggling to keep their emergency rooms (ER) open in the face of an unprecedented shortage of doctors and nurses.

In March, Red Lake's Margaret Cochenour Memorial Hospital was forced to close its ER for 24 hours due to a lack of available doctors. It came within hours of a second closure last month.

Hospitals in Ottawa, Perth, Carleton Place and Mount Forest have also faced ER closures.

Marcus Powlowski, MP for Thunder Bay-Rainy River, is also an emergency department physician and a member of the parliamentary standing committee on health. (Jeff Walters/CBC)

Powlowski's proposed recommendations, outlined in a media release Monday, would require the federal government to work with the provinces to bring about change.

The proposalsare:

  • Have the federal government establish a national licensure for doctors, sophysicians can work across Canada without having to be licensed in each province.
  • Have the Ontario government implement Practice Ready-Assessments (PRAs) for international medical graduates, which would allowinternationally trained physicians to receive a licence after just 12 weeks of supervised practice, as opposed to the current year or more.
  • Increase the number of residency positions, especially family practice residency, for foreign graduates, including in rural areas. (Powlowskiinitially called forthe College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, orCPSO,to take this on,but his office later clarified that it would require co-operation between several different bodies.)
  • Have the federal and provincial governments work together to allow doctors in certain countries to practise in Canada without further accreditation or schooling.

'Nothing safe in not having emergency rooms open'

"Certainly the colleges of physicians and surgeons have to ensure that people who are allowed to practise in Canada are of an adequate standard," Powlowski told CBC.

"But as they are making the decision as to who should be accredited ... I think they also have to appreciate the fact that there's nothing safe in not having emergency rooms open because of doctor shortages, and nor is there anything safe when people don't have a family doctor."

Powlowski plans to meet with several national health-care groups, including colleges of physicians and surgeons and doctors' organizations, to finalize his recommendations before presenting them to the minister of health in early fall, he said.

The physician recruiter for the Fort Frances and Rainy River area said he welcomes Powlowski's proposal for practice-ready assessments.

"If you can get a physician for three to four years, and you have 12 weeks or 16 weeks of supervision to help them, I think it's a pretty good deal actually," Todd Hamilton said.

Hamilton said he also was buoyed last week by news that Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Joneshad given the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO)and the College of Nurses of Ontario two weeks to come up with a plan to expedite the registration of foreign-trained health-care workers.

However, Hamilton said he wasn't sure how much the move would benefit the northwest.

Todd Hamilton, the physician recruiter for the Fort Frances and District Physician Recruitment Retention Committee, says he welcomes Powlowski's proposal to shorten the supervision process for international medical graduates. (Submitted by Todd Hamilton)

"I don't see a lot in the article that they would use either [international medical graduate]physicians or nurses and specifically assign them to communities in need in northern or northwestern Ontario."

Still, he added, "For health care in general, it's important for them to leave no stone unturned."

The president and CEO of the Lake of the Woods District Hospital said he's seen progress with the college around licensing out-of-province physicians to work in his hospital'semergency department.

"We had our first Manitoba physician go through that process and get licensed, andthat physician is picking up shifts this weekend, so we weren't facing closure," Ray Racette said on Friday.

"We're really, really excited that the CPSO was willing to do that."

Racette and hospital chief of staff Dr. Sean Moorepreviously told CBC that the CPSO licensing process for Manitoba physicians frequently took months and deterred doctors holidaying in the region from volunteering to pick up shifts with the hospital. In response,the CPSO said its processing time was two to three weeks.

Head shot of Ray Racette in hallway of hospital.
Ray Racette, president and CEO of Lake of the Woods District Hospital in Kenora, says the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario quickly processed an application from a Manitoba physician so the doctor could help fill shifts in the Kenora ER. He hopes two other Manitoba physicians will have a similar experience. (Logan Turner/CBC)

Racette said henow hopes the college will provide similarly expedited service for two other Manitoba physicians seeking licensure in Ontario.

The shift vacancy rate at the Lake of the Woods District Hospital currently sits at 41 per cent, Racette said, downfrom 44 per cent in June.

There's still no news on other proposals to ease the physician shortage in northwestern Ontario, which were put forward to politicians by the Northwest Regional Chief of Staff Council in March, according to Dr. Sarah Newbery, the associate dean of physician workforce strategy at Northern Ontario School of Medicine University.

Those proposals include supporting physicians working alone in rural northern emergency rooms with real-time virtual access to specialists, and providing funding for medical residents to accompany locums from their medical schools who are working in the region.