every day we hear stories about the primary care crisis in canada and the urgent need for a solution. primary care is the first point of contact into the health system for routine healthcare needs.
more than six million canadians are not able to access a regular primary care provider. this number continues to balloon.
many family physicians are retiring, some reducing clinic hours, and others focusing their practices to address specific conditions. coupled with a decreased interest in choosing family practice as a specialty, more communities are left vulnerable to the realities of limited access to primary care.
so, what’s the solution? governments are celebrating the opening of new medical schools, new nurse practitioner-led clinics and announcing increased scope of practice for pharmacists to manage minor ailments. unfortunately, these piecemeal initiatives — focused on access alone — will not solve the problems of primary care.
a patchwork quilt only works when the pieces are put together into a collaborative design.
we need a primary care system designed to be coordinated, comprehensive and accessible. and we need a primary care health workforce committed to collaboration to make this happen.