Vancouver Sun

Province aims to woo U.K. doctors

B.C. ads tout better salaries

- KATIE DEROSA

The B.C. government is courting doctors and nurses in the United Kingdom, touting wages that are double what they're making now.

However, a B.C.-based physician recruiter said this province remains one of the hardest places for internatio­nally trained doctors to get into, which is frustratin­g for them and British Columbians without access to one.

Those riding the Tube in London or buses in Glasgow might notice Government of B.C. advertisem­ents that read: “Providing care for families should allow you to provide for yours” or “A better deal for family doctors, more time for patients.”

The ads include a link to a health recruitmen­t website that features a video depicting a float plane soaring over forested mountains and a kite surfer gliding across the ocean.

The ad campaign comes as thousands of doctors have gone on strike against England's National Health System in recent weeks calling for higher wages and better working conditions.

NHS doctors, for example, are paid a basic starting salary equivalent to $55,000, the entry-level salary for those doing their medical residency, ranging up to $170,500 for someone with about 28 years of experience.

B.C. in 2022 negotiated a new physician payment agreement that means a full-time family physician working 1,680 hours a year, who handles 1,250 patients, will earn at least $385,000.

Doctors interviewe­d by British media during the strike said their wages are about half that of equivalent physicians in Canada or the U.S, which is why many are leaving the U.K.

Asked about the ad campaign during an unrelated news conference on Monday, Premier David Eby said he reached an agreement with fellow premiers that “we're not going to try to poach people from other provinces across Canada — we didn't make that commitment to the government of the U.K.”

“If the government of the U.K. is not recognizin­g what they have in terms of the amazing skilled profession­als that are there, by not compensati­ng them properly, not treating them with respect, then they should come to British Columbia,” he said.

British doctors will “feel very at home here,” Eby said, touting the double-decker buses in Victoria.

“I personally would like to welcome them at the airport and thank them for their contributi­ons to our health-care system,” he said.

Phil Martin, who runs a physician recruitmen­t company called Physicians For You, said he wishes it was as easy as jumping on a plane and arriving at Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport.

Canada is the hardest country for internatio­nally trained doctors to get into, he said, and “B.C. is the hardest (province) in Canada.”

“Unless a doctor really wants to come to B.C., it's easier to go elsewhere,” said Martin, who is based in the Okanagan and has worked in recruitmen­t for 18 years. “They can go to Manitoba or Ontario now without supervisio­n, without an exam, and still practise independen­tly.”

“Doctors get so frustrated with all the challenges,” he said, noting it takes about a year for general practition­ers to become licensed to practise in Canada or 18 months for a specialist, compared to about six months in Australia. “I had one doctor say to me, `it's like they're almost trying to keep us out.'”

Martin, who has worked in the U.K. and Australia before moving to Canada, said B.C. is losing talented doctors to countries like Australia because the accreditat­ion process there is much easier.

He said the B.C. NDP's announceme­nt in 2022 that it would loosen restrictio­ns on foreign-trained doctors hasn't made enough of a difference in removing the bureaucrat­ic hurdles.

“B.C. is still behind everyone else,” he said.

The government tripled the yearly intake — 32 to 96 — of internatio­nally trained doctors that can become licensed in B.C. through the practice ready assessment program. Internatio­nally trained doctors not eligible for that program can become associate physicians, doctors that work for a period of time under the supervisio­n of a B.C. doctor.

Despite these changes, Rosemary Pawliuk, president of the Society of Canadians Studying Abroad, said “the significan­t roadblocks have not been removed.”

The fact that the government is courting U.K. doctors while not making it any easier for Canadians who study medicine abroad to practise medicine here is “a slap in the face to these (Canadians),” said Pawliuk, a lawyer from Metro Vancouver.

She was speaking from Honolulu, where her daughter, Dr. Alexandra Brito, practises medicine. Brito completed her medical degree in Ireland and, despite achieving top marks, could not get a residency placement in Canada and as a result, completed her residency in the U.S. “We're saying we don't have enough doctors when there are literally thousands of Canadians who — with reasonable assessment of competence rather than these tricky little barriers — would be happy to come home,” Pawliuk said.

Eby said medical residency spaces in B.C. are limited — for example to 186 a year for family medicine — and priority is given to those who study medicine in Canada.

“This is an ongoing concern, I know, for people who have done training in other places,” he said.

Currently, the University of British Columbia has 52 residency positions for internatio­nal medical graduates in family medicine and six residency positions in general specialty positions.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said in December 2023 that almost all of the 666 internatio­nal medical graduates registered in the province last year are now working as doctors, with more than half in family medicine.

The Ministry of Health did not provide updated figures by deadline.

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 ?? ?? The British Columbia health recruitmen­t advertisem­ents above are posted in Tube stations and double-decker buses in the United Kingdom. Premier David Eby says if the efforts of U.K. health profession­als are not being duly recognized and compensate­d, “then they should come to British Columbia.”
The British Columbia health recruitmen­t advertisem­ents above are posted in Tube stations and double-decker buses in the United Kingdom. Premier David Eby says if the efforts of U.K. health profession­als are not being duly recognized and compensate­d, “then they should come to British Columbia.”

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