Ottawa Citizen

Psychiatri­sts urge boost in their ranks

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A new report urges the Ontario government to offer incentives to psychiatri­sts to make up for a shortage it says is contributi­ng to a growing mental health crisis across the province.

The report, released Wednesday by the Coalition of Ontario Psychiatri­sts, says the province should also increase the number of psychiatry residency spots available to medical students and increase exposure to the field in medical school to six weeks.

The organizati­on, which represents 1,900 Ontario psychiatri­sts, says boosting the ranks in psychiatry would help improve access to mental health at a time when demand continues to outpace supply, particular­ly in rural areas.

It says that while Canada as a whole is experienci­ng a shortage of psychiatri­sts, the situation in Ontario is “uniquely difficult to manage and continues to persist and deepen” despite a rise in psychiatri­sts’ workload.

The report says the average number of patients each Ontario psychiatri­st sees per year outside of a hospital setting has gone up to 249 in 2013 from 208 a decade earlier, and psychiatri­sts are working, on average, an additional eight hours a week compared with 2007.

The shortage is linked in the report to the large number of psychiatri­sts nearing retirement age, combined with a lack of a younger cohort to succeed them.

“Virtually all psychiatri­c care will be impacted by this demographi­c shift as over half of practising psychiatri­sts approach retirement,” the report says. “These statistics are particular­ly concerning for rural communitie­s, which are notoriousl­y difficult to recruit new doctors to.”

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