Nurse practitioners to head 3 new Ontario clinics - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:25 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

Nurse practitioners to head 3 new Ontario clinics

The Ontario government is going ahead with three new clinics headed by nurse-practitioners, the first of 25 set to open by 2012.

The Ontario government is going ahead with three new clinics headed by nurse-practitioners, the first of 25 set to open by 2012.

The clinics will focus on primary care, including chronic disease management and health promotion, the Ministry of Health said Friday.

They are intended to fill gaps in primary care, especially the shortage of family doctors.

"Todays announcement is the answer thousands of people have been waiting for," Wendy Fucile, president of the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario, said in a comment posted on the ministry's website.

Nurse practitionersare registered nurseswith additional education in health assessment, diagnosis and management of illnesses and injuries.

As well as treatingcommonailments and injuries, they can order lab tests, X-rays and other diagnostic procedures.

Ontarios first nurse practitioner-led clinic, which opened in Sudbury in 2007,provides health care toabout 2,000 patients, the ministry said. Nurse practitioners are increasingly popular, but still represent a tiny proportion of the nearly 258,000 registered nurses in Canada, the Canadian Institute of Health Information reported in 2007.

Between 2003 and 2007, the number of licensednurse practitionersalmost doubled to 1,346, the institute said. Every territory andprovince except the Yukon Territory had licensed nurse practitioner programs in 2007, it said.

The three new clinics in Ontario will be opened in Belle River, about 30 kilometres east of Windsor, Sault Ste. Marie and Thunder Bay.