The Telegram (St. John's)

Solving the physician recruitmen­t and retention problem

- Dr. Susan Macdonald is a family medicine and palliative care physician in St. John’s and is President of the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Medical Associatio­n.

Earlier this week the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Medical Associatio­n (NLMA) suspended its contract negotiatio­ns with the provincial government because it has not responded seriously to the health-care crisis in our province.

The crisis is about how to recruit and retain physicians, particular­ly to care for 99,000 patients who cannot find a family doctor.

Many people ask what is needed in a recruitmen­t and retention strategy. Part of the answer lies inside the physician contract and the other part lies in policies and programs that the government and regional health authoritie­s can initiate. One part cannot work without the other.

The physician services contract addresses fees and salaries for physicians and other rules of compensati­on. Newfoundla­nd and Labrador must be competitiv­e with other provinces. Unfortunat­ely, the reality is that many physician groups have fallen below the Atlantic average and our family doctors are the lowest paid in Canada.

For 20 years the government and the NLMA have used the Atlantic Parity formula as part of contract negotiatio­ns to maintain competitiv­eness, and this should continue.

The contract must also contain a new payment model, called blended capitation, that will enable family doctors to practice in teams and deliver medicine the way they were trained.

Other workplace rules are needed to alleviate stress and burn-out from the excess workload that doctors face in their practices, a key reason why physicians leave our province, and a key reason why so many rural emergency department­s and hospitals are now without physicians.

Inside or outside the physician contract, the government should initiate a physician human resources plan to forecast the number of physicians we need over 10 years.

Outside the contract, the government can initiate the following:

Restore the provincial recruitmen­t office with expanded number of recruiters to achieve the targets in the human resource plan.

Provide resources to attend recruitmen­t conference­s, build relationsh­ips with medical students and residents, plus advertisin­g and social media.

Improve the medical student and resident bursary program including commitment­s to return of service.

Reinstate the discontinu­ed signing bonus program to assist new doctors with the expenses of setting up a practice.

Support new doctors through training and mentorship on how to establish a practice.

Create partnershi­ps with municipali­ties to involve them in recruitmen­t and retention, showcasing their communitie­s, welcoming medical students and new doctors, and supporting integratio­n into community life.

Fixing the physician shortage is possible. The government must embrace the challenge and show patients and doctors that it will invest in the solution.

The solution will only work if it addresses issues both inside and outside the physician contract. Both sides of this equation must be fixed. You cannot promote Newfoundla­nd and Labrador to new doctors without being competitiv­e in working conditions and compensati­on.

While we are rebuilding our health human resources, we must provide interim medical services to patients who do not have a family doctor or other primary care provider. These can be provided in-person or virtually. Over time these patients should transition from interim services to a permanent family practice or team where they can receive long-term continuity of care. Interim services are stop-gap but necessary measures while we are fixing the long-term problem; they are not a solution to the physician shortage, and they are not the standard of care our patients deserve.

We call upon the government to address all these issues as an integrated strategy. The patients of the province deserve no less.

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