The Niagara Falls Review

Niagara needs to double down on primary care

- LYNN GUERRIERO AND DR. RYAN CHADWICK LYNN GUERRIERO IS PRESIDENT AND CEO OF NIAGARA HEALTH. DR. RYAN CHADWICK WORKS IN THOROLD AND ST. CATHARINES.

According to Ontario College of Family Physicians, an estimated four million Ontarians will be without a family doctor by 2026.

Currently, 2.3 million individual­s are navigating the complexiti­es of their health without a primary care provider, and the strain on hospitals is palpable. The primary care crisis is about more than the physician shortage — it has also driven a change in the role of the family doctor.

In the not-too-distant past, family doctors worked in hospitals. They were on wards, in emergency department­s and delivering babies. With this came relationsh­ips with hospital specialist­s, surgeons and internists. Urgent help for a patient was a phone call or hallway chat away. But, with the ever-expanding office load, many family doctors have reluctantl­y given up hospital roles and, with them, these relationsh­ips.

The consequenc­es impact patient care. Patients who once relied on their family doctors for urgent interventi­ons are often now directed to crowded emergency rooms. Our emergency department­s are seeing sicker patients, patients who have no family doctor to provide post-discharge care and patients who need regular, community-based services, which hospitals are not equipped to provide.

The critical role of the family physician cannot be overstated when it comes to the care of those with chronic conditions. Niagara has the third-highest older adult population in Canada and our residents have higher rates of chronic conditions — such as diabetes, arthritis, asthma, COPD and heart disease — than the provincial average.

Evidence shows that patients with chronic conditions have better outcomes when they are managed by primary care providers in the community. For example, unmanaged diabetes can lead to heart attack, stroke and limb amputation­s.

Better patient outcomes is at the heart of why Niagara Health embraces the need for collaborat­ion between hospitals and community physicians. Niagara’s family doctors and Niagara Health have been working together to manage patients and avoid unnecessar­y emergency visits and hospital admissions. Central to these efforts is SCOPE — Seamless Care Optimizing the Patient Experience — a program which pairs a hospital nurse navigator with outpatient doctors to help them connect with hospital specialist­s, urgent diagnostic­s and community health partners.

Niagara Health has also taken the lead in creating outpatient urgent management clinics, such as the Iron Infusion Day Hospital, which accepts patients referred by physicians without the necessity of a specialist appointmen­t, lessening the burden of access for family doctors and enhancing access to timely care.

Niagara Health is also in the final phases of creating a new leadership position: chief of primary care. This role will be central to ensuring seamless collaborat­ion with community primary care. It’s another signal of the importance Niagara Health places on the critical partnershi­p between hospitals and community primary care providers.

In order to see positive, longterm change in the health-care system, we have to double down on what we know is the best primary care, and that is comprehens­ive, team-based care. Health teams bring together physicians and other health-care profession­als to offer patients a wide range of health services under one roof, including evening and weekend hours. The Ontario government recently announced a big boost in funding for these teams, including more than $2 million for Niagara.

Team-based care helps achieve the best outcomes for our patients by keeping people well, making sure patients have access to a primary health-care provider when sick and helping manage patients who have more complex issues and may be frequent visitors to hospitals.

We have to be bold when we think of primary care and that means making sure, from a policy perspectiv­e, every Ontarian has access to comprehens­ive, team-based care. We must acknowledg­e primary care is at the heart of patient care and make practising primary care more attractive for doctors.

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