“we are certainly supportive, but for someone over 80 who doesn’t have a doctor, that seems too long,” said inch.
the group’s proposal is designed for central ottawa but inch said it could easily be replicated elsewhere.
nurse practitioners already deliver primary care across the province in community health centres, family health teams and a small number of nurse-practitioner-led clinics.
“their nursing backgrounds and advanced training align well with helping seniors prevent and manage age-related chronic diseases, co-morbidities and disabilities and their holistic approach supports aging in place,” says a document from seniors health innovations hub.
inch said the group is trying to get the attention of philpott’s team to consider their proposed plan as a way to expedite access to care for older ontario residents in need it.
“we have written to them. we want them to be aware of the ease of implementation (of this proposal) and the timeframe we could do that in,” said inch. she said the model aligns with philpott’s vision for neighbourhood “health homes” as part of primary care coverage.
she said other communities could use the model and build “ready-made team-based medicine” for seniors by partnering with local institutions involved in providing healthcare along with nurse practitioners.