The Beacon Herald

Doctor shortage worsens mental-health care

- JUSTIN BERGAMINI Justin Bergamini is an Ottawa-based psychother­apist specializi­ng in men's mental health, and owner of Aligned Psychother­apy.

The shortage of primary care physicians is frequently in the news. The harm to Canadian mental-health care caused by this shortage, not so much.

Yet, the scale of the problem is acute. Roughly six million Canadians are without access to primary care physicians, and if the Canadian Medical Associatio­n is right about the federal budget's impact on doctors' retirement plans, things only will get worse.

Research finds individual­s with primary care physicians experience better mental-health outcomes. The importance of primary care physicians in mental-health care is multifacet­ed, and it goes well beyond the obvious connection between one's physical and mental health.

For Canadians suffering from mental illness, their family doctor is often the first point of contact and serves as a gateway and guide to additional specialize­d care such as psychother­apists, psychiatri­sts, psychologi­sts and neurologis­ts.

During the acute period of an emergent mental illness, many naturally turn to their family doctor. Without this basic connection, many Canadians would be completely untethered from the health-care system.

A person's participat­ion in psychother­apy is often the result of encouragem­ent from their doctor.

In some cases, psychother­apists collaborat­e directly with a primary care physician, to provide what is known as a “circle of care,” allowing multiple care providers to share their insights into the experience­s and well-being of the patient, informing diagnostic­s, referrals and treatments.

In other instances, a primary care physician will determine psychiatri­c medication is an appropriat­e treatment. The physician can monitor the patient's experience with the medication and make changes as necessary.

Compare this to the experience of someone without a family doctor. They are left to wait in line for hours in the hope of being seen at a walk-in or emergency clinic. There they are faced with the prospect of disclosing deeply personal, often troubling informatio­n to a complete stranger whom they are unlikely ever to see again.

If psychiatri­c medication is prescribed, they are often on their own: no monitoring of efficacy or side-effects.

We know that ease of access to health care is associated with accessing care. For every person struggling with mental illness without a family doctor who attends a walk-in clinic, there are others who will not access care at all.

Moreover, having a family doctor can be a prerequisi­te for receiving mental-health care.

Psychother­apists have been known to turn down a potential client if they lack a family doctor. An already overworked clinician may not be able to take on the role of being the sole care provider for a high-needs, high-risk client.

That decision, while never taken lightly, is based on the reality that certain clinical issues pose higher risk for emergency interventi­on, hospitaliz­ation, offending behaviour and suicide.

Because of its impact on physicians' retirement plans, the federal budget's most serious unintended consequenc­e could well be damage to Canadians' mental-health care.

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