CBC Edition

Family doctors fear new Quebec regulation will make it harder to see patients in need

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Family doctors in the province are urging the Quebec government to re‐ verse course on proposed regulation­s which they say would further limit access to health care in the province.

General practition­ers fear that the regulation will pre‐ vent them from providing care to unregister­ed patients who come to their office us‐ ing the walk-in service, even those coming from Guichet d'accès à la première ligne (GAP), a service Quebec Health Minister Christian Dubé promotes for people who don't have a family doc‐ tor.

According to the new reg‐ ulations, patients registered with the Guichet d'accès à un médecin de famille (GAMF) will receive priority, so if a family doctor wants to take on other patients, they will have to justify their choice.

"If I see a patient who doesn't have a family doctor at a walk-in, I can currently choose to take care of them if I judge that they have sig‐ nificant health needs. I do this by only signing a form, sent to the Régie de l'assur‐ ance santé du Québec," said

Chantal Guimond, a family doctor and the president of Réseau MAclinique.

Now, she says, she and her fellow physicians will have to justify their decision to provide care to patients who come from the family doctor access desk.

"I listened to them, I par‐ tially took charge of the prob‐ lem, I want to see them again to continue providing care, but this puts the brakes on that," said Guimond.

Dr. Anne-Marie Beaulieu says she fears having more paperwork because of the new rules. If for example, a family of two parents with two children ask her to regis‐ ter and take care of their new, third child, she will have to fill out even more forms than she currently has to do.

She says she already spends an average of 10 hours per week on "adminis‐ trative paperwork."

However, while the regu‐ lations do provide for certain exceptions such as the care of members of the same family, meaning a new baby could therefore be followed by the same doctor, the an‐ swer wasn't clear to Beaulieu.

Dr. Marc-André Amyot, the president of the Fédéra‐ tion des médecins omniprati‐ ciens du Québec (FMOQ), the federation representi­ng gen‐ eral practition­ers, says the rule change "risks freeing up less time for doctors who want to provide clinical ser‐ vices to patients."

Several weeks ago, the FMOQ sent a letter to Que‐ bec Health Minister Dubé who wants doctors to take care of 13,000 vulnerable pa‐ tients still waiting at the GAMF - asking Dubé not to implement the new regula‐ tions.

"I am not suggesting there aren't any access issues. On the contrary, we know that it is difficult," said Amyot.

Last Friday, the FMOQ said the regulation­s would negatively impact the profes‐ sional autonomy of family physicians working in th province.

A family doctor looking to accept a patient who isn't registered with the GAMF must get prior authorizat­ion from a medical coordinato­r, a process they family doctors say "largely eliminates the clinical judgment that a physician must exercise re‐ garding whether a patient would benefit from registra‐ tion."

The consultati­on period for the regulation has just come to an end, meaning the Legault government could make changes to it.

But the health minister's office continues to say that the regulation prioritize­s pa‐ tient care for those who need it most..

"It is our responsibi­lity to ensure that vulnerable pa‐ tients are treated as a prior‐ ity in the health system," said Dubé.

"We are talking here about Quebecers living with HIV or having suicidal thoughts, in particular. Car‐ ing for a new patient should not be to the detriment of a person who is vulnerable. It is therefore entirely logical that these people should be given priority care."

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