The Prince George Citizen

No physio changes planned, ministry says

- Stuart NEATBY Citizen staff sneatby@pgcitizen.ca

Despite repeated calls by local physiother­apists and health advocates for increased physiother­apy training in northern B.C. the Ministry of Advanced Education, Skills & Training has no immediate plans to increase the number of student seats.

UBC currently has the only training institutio­n for physiother­apists in B.C. Each year, the department of physical therapy accepts 80 students, all of which receive their instructio­n in Vancouver. In 2013, in partnershi­p with UNBC, UBC establishe­d the northern rural cohort, reserving spots for 20 of these students to complete their clinical placements in northern and rural communitie­s. But Terry Fedorkiw of the group Physiother­apists for Northern Communitie­s said that the demand for trained physiother­apists is still dire, and not enough students are graduating from the program to meet the needs of the north.

We are not hopeful of things moving too fast.

— Terry Fedorkiw

“We need an extra 100 physios in the north, in order to fill the needs in comparison to the population,” Fedorkiw said.

Northern B.C. currently has 104 physiother­apists working in the region, the lowest number by far of all other health regions in the province. Nine towns in the region do not have access to publicly funded physiother­apists. B.C. has the lowest number of training seats per capita in Canada. Ontario, Quebec and Alberta all train significan­tly more physiother­apists each year.

The Citizen spoke to two media representa­tives of the Ministry of Advanced Education, Skills & Training. Both representa­tives said no current proposals to increase the number of training seats for physiother­apists had been received by the ministry. However, an e-mailed statement said the ministry was exploring the possibilit­y of bringing a full physiother­apy training program to the north.

According to Fedorkiw, several proposals have been made to the B.C. government from her organizati­on urging an increase in the number seats in the UBC program in order to meet the increasing demand for trained physiother­apists. She said she believes several proposals related to enrolment in the department have also been made to the ministry by UNBC and UBC.

Fedorkiw and members of Physiother­apists for Northern Communitie­s have made presentati­ons to the Select Standing Committee on Finance and Government Relations for the last three years, urging that enrolment seats for UBC’s physical therapy program be boosted to 100, while the northern and rural cohort be increased to 40. She and her group also met with former Minister of Advanced Education Andrew Wilkinson last January, have secured the support of Prince George Mayor Lyn Hall and have submitted resolution­s in support of physiother­apy training to the Union of B.C. Municipali­ties.

So far, she has seen no sign the NDP government has given more attention to the shortage of physiother­apists in the region than the previous government.

“We are not hopeful of things moving too fast,” Fedorkiw said.

Cathy Ulrich, CEO for Northern Health, said that further educationa­l opportunit­ies for physiother­apists would be desirable for health authoritie­s.

“We do believe that if there is education for physiother­apists and rehab profession­als in the north, that recruitmen­t would become easier for those positions,” Ulrich said.

“That is something that the community has been advocating for, and it’s something that we’ve been working with UNBC and the various ministries on for a couple of years.”

According to Bill Miller, the associate dean of health profession­s at UBC, there are currently no plans to increase the number of seats in the physical therapy program. He said that such a decision would need to involve input from many players, including UNBC, the ministry of Advanced Education, Skills & Training and the Ministry of Health.

“UBC is absolutely committed to helping increase the number of physical therapists in all communitie­s in British Columbia. That said, plans for the future expansion of the physical therapy is not a decision that just UBC can make,” Miller said.

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