Account Login/Registration

Access KelownaNow using your Facebook account, or by entering your information below.


Facebook


OR


Register

Privacy Policy

Your Voice: BC will continue to lose family doctors unless changes are made

All letters to the editor published by KelownaNow reflect only the opinions of the readers who submit them, and not necessarily those of KelownaNow or its staff. Letters can be submitted to news@kelownanow.com


We, the undersigned physicians at Rutland Medical Associates, have decided we need to speak out on what is happening within longitudinal primary care (traditional family practice medicine) in our province. Never before have we stood at such a precipice. The coming crisis will have lasting consequences for many years to come. Primary care is the bedrock foundation for our healthcare system and the collapse of this will have after shocks felt at all levels of health care delivery. Having a family physician means promoting preventative medicine, doing outpatient workups, redirecting care away from overwhelmed ER departments when appropriate, providing earlier more manageable disease diagnosis, collaborating with specialist and ensuring you get the best care possible. We are instrumental in decreasing the number of in patients and over capacity at the hospital. We help transition patients to short stay units, long term care or follow up on our discharged patients, and some of us even do house calls for the infirm. Good care means taking initiative and ensuring our patients don't fall through the ever enlarging cracks in the system.

Unfortunately, Health Minister Adrian Dix and this government have created a false equivalence between urgent and primary care centres and nurse practitioners to family physicians, and continue to divert limited money without proper accounting to this model. They believe it will provide the same if not better delivery of care and we just need to wait to see it. We believe this to be blatantly false and not a cost effective use of funds. Simply put, family physicians are the work horses that are able to quickly assess manage and treat patients with a clinical acumen that can not be matched. Family medicine means dealing with mental health, cancer, heart failure, liver failure, multiple sclerosis, neuropathic disorders, etc... The breadth of knowledge we must be aware of is extensive and ever growing. Our education is rooted in four years of medical school and two-plus years of residency, rotating through a multitude of services including cardiology, surgery, ICU and more.

The sad fact is family physicians are undervalued and the government has failed to address this. Remuneration falls short when compared to other provinces when our living expenses in British Columbia are quite high. Additionally, while we don't begrudge our specialist colleagues and their superior pay, the wide discrepancy between general practitioner and specialty medicine becomes disheartening and compounds the problem. Becoming an ever-less-desirable field to go into means there are less medical students willing to go into family medicine as a career path.

<who>Photo Credit: 123rf

Practicing in longitudinal care, it becomes quickly apparent the unreasonable expectations built into the current fee for service model. Physicians are pressured into a rushed, limited-issues-per-appointment care and penalized financially for taking additional time when needed. Fortunately, the majority of family physicians are inherently caring and genuinely want the best for our patients, so we take on the on the extra issues seeing the "oh just one more thing doctor," and spending extra time with our complex and frail elderly. However, this results in punishing after-clinic and weekend hours completing paperwork. Family physicians shouldn't have to enforce a rushed limited problem based appointment model with patients just to be able to have a semblance of work life balance.

The government makes us go through hoops to try to get our higher billing patient payments such as the complex care plans or chronic disease management plans. This forces us to play a game that "proves" we are taking care of patients as if the expectation is we are not. Age-payment modifiers to the fee for service model still don't accurately reflect our time. While people may comment on salary values, they don't see or appreciate our extensive work hours (60hrs+/week full time physician) and overhead clinic splits. Physicians, doing a full work week practice, are burning themselves out with the unseen after hours. The government looks for creative ways to increase access to care and minimize the time burden required, but it is inherently part of the job that can't be "shifted." Time is needed these days due to the especially high burden of quality of charting expected given our medico legal responsibilities.

The government expects a 24-hour on-call evening/weekend service, which we must provide services for emergency results such as labs, investigations, long term care facilities, hospice patients, etc.... When we deal with these issues, we bill a nominal fee. Our clinic rotates through this service. It affects what we do and plan with our families as we need to be available. We all would rather not be "on call" given the disruption. Given the expectation the government places on us should we not be provided an hourly on call availability fee for this service. Something as nominal as $6-8 per hour would make family physicians happy to receive something for providing 24-hour availability. Fundamentally, something is wrong in medicine when providing a below-minimum-baseline hourly wage premium for an add-on service mandated by the regulatory colleges to enhance patient care would be a step towards making us feel valued.

Family physicians are burnt out and demoralized. That is why so many of us look for any subspecialties with better pay to go into, such as hospitalist work, rural ER, GP oncology, addictions medicine, skin clinics, etc... It is why so many licensed family physicians are on the sideline NOT practicing full practice longitudinal care. If the public wants access to family physicians for the future, now is the time a substantial investment needs to be made to incentivize it. Not tomorrow or next week, but now. That means dramatically increasing fee for service or providing a dramatic change within the system itself, perhaps a new hourly payment model for administrative charting, referral or other time that directly comes out of the patients appointment. This will attract those that left traditional family medicine care to come back when we are paid appropriately and work life balance is obtainable. The unattached patients in the province nearing a million will decrease. The government always has money to spend on whatever it values including museums, but never money when it comes to GP recruitment and remuneration. Currently, we are on track for more physicians looking for their way out of longitudinal care and a never ending stream of more clinics shuttering. The domino effect will multiply through the system and patients will suffer.

Sincerely,

  • Dr. Joshua Nordine
  • Dr. Jason Cassidy
  • Dr. Joel Strautman
  • Dr. Louise Graham
  • Dr. Jennifer Verhelst
  • Dr. Anthony Morham
  • Dr. Lawrence Wiebe


If you get value from KelownaNow and believe local independent media is important to our community we ask that you please consider subscribing to our daily newsletter.

If you appreciate what we do, we ask that you consider supporting our local independent news platform.


Send your comments, news tips, typos, letter to the editor, photos and videos to news@kelownanow.com.



Weather
webcam icon

weather-icon
Thu
13℃

weather-icon
Fri
15℃

weather-icon
Sat
15℃

weather-icon
Sun
15℃

weather-icon
Mon
19℃

weather-icon
Tue
17℃

current feed webcam icon

Recent Livestream




Top Stories

Follow Us

Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Follow us on Linkedin Follow us on Youtube Listen on Soundcloud Follow Our TikTok Feed Follow Our RSS Follow Our pinterest Feed
Follow Our Newsletter
Privacy Policy