Close X
Friday, October 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

5 million adults without primary care, surgeries returning to normal: CIHI report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2024 10:16 AM
  • 5 million adults without primary care, surgeries returning to normal: CIHI report

Eight-three per cent of adults in this country have a regular primary-care provider, but that still leaves 5.4 million adults without one, a new report by the Canadian Institute for Health Information says.  

Seniors 65 years and older are more likely to have access to a family doctor or nurse practitioner than younger adults between 18 and 34, and access to primary care is highest in Ontario and lowest in Nunavut, the CIHI report released Thursday says.  

The report measures the baseline of health priorities agreed upon by the federal government and the provinces and territories, including improving access to primary care, reducing wait times for mental-health and substance-use counselling, recruiting more health-care workers, decreasing surgical wait times and increasing the use of electronic health information. 

Data from Quebec was not available for this report but will be available in future, according to CIHI. 

The institute will also collect data to measure progress on two more health priorities in the near future, including ensuring seniors can age with dignity and improving cultural safety for Indigenous patients in the health-care system.

There will be a report every year to measure progress in these health-care priorities across the country, federal health minister Mark Holland said in an interview on Wednesday.    

Thursday's report says the surgical backlogs that happened during the COVID-19 pandemic have decreased and the number of surgeries performed has mostly returned to pre-pandemic levels across Canada.  

Holland said each of the health-care funding agreements signed with the provinces and territories includes targets for the number of doctors and nurses that need to be added to the workforce.  

Many rural and Indigenous communities are particularly hard-hit by the primary care shortage, the minister said. 

In addition to recruiting doctors, nurse practitioners and nurses from other jurisdictions, the solution requires a "sustained effort" to encourage more First Nations, Métis and Inuit people — as well as others living in small towns and rural areas — "to be choosing health careers and really seeing far more people serving their own communities," Holland said. 

The CIHI report noted that even if they have a primary-care provider, a recent survey showed Canadians still "face greater difficulty getting same-day, next-day, evening or weekend appointments" compared with people in nine other high-income countries including the U.S. and the U.K.  

Jenna Kedy, a 20-year-old patient advocate who worked with CIHI on the report, said she's grateful to have a family doctor after being without one for almost two years, but getting immediate appointments is a challenge. 

Kedy, who lives in Halifax, requires specialist care for several chronic conditions, including juvenile arthritis, fibromyalgia, anxiety and depression. 

Having a family doctor is vital to "connect the dots for you" and keep track of her multiple health issues and medications, she said, but her doctor is too overworked to be available as much as she needs, she said in an interview with The Canadian Press. 

"If I ever had a big thing come up, it's not like I could call my family doctor and go see him that week," Kedy said. 

"As someone with such unpredictable illnesses, it still does cause unnecessary trips into the ER," she said. 

"The doctors are overwhelmed and they can't provide the same level of care they could have if they had less on their plate.”

According to the CIHI report, there were 48,199 family physicians in Canada in 2022. In P.E.I, New Brunswick, Ontario, Saskatchewan, Alberta, B.C. and Yukon, more family doctors were entering the workforce than leaving it. 

In Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, and Manitoba, more were leaving the workforce than entering it. Data was not available for Quebec, N.W.T. or Nunavut. 

But almost all provinces and territories saw more nurse practitioners entering the workforce in 2022 than leaving it. 

The exceptions were Yukon, where more nurse practitioners were leaving than entering the workforce. Quebec data was not available. 

Cheryl Chui, director of health system analytics at CIHI, said one of the other health-care priorities — using connected electronic health information systems — is an important part of solving the primary care shortage. 

That's because it will "enable better sharing of information and to reduce some of the administrative burden that health-care professionals face,” she said. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Court finds man not justified in killing Bear the Chihuahua in Boston Bar

Court finds man not justified in killing Bear the Chihuahua in Boston Bar
A British Columbia provincial court judge has ruled that a Boston Bar man who shot a tea-cup Chihuahua named Bear claiming it was menacing his chickens was not justified in killing the animal. The court said in a ruling published online that Behrouz Rahmani Far had been in a bitter, years-long feud with the dog's owner, his neighbour Glenn Kurack. 

Court finds man not justified in killing Bear the Chihuahua in Boston Bar

Man charged after prominent Calgary radio host attacked

Man charged after prominent Calgary radio host attacked
27 year old Dilpreet Singh from Calgary been charged with assaulting a prominent Calgary radio host, who alleges he was targeted because of the station's news reporting. Police say they received a call on Sept. 29 about an assault near a banquet hall in the Horizon neighbourhood.

Man charged after prominent Calgary radio host attacked

B.C. man gets prison sentence, fine for using fake names to buy guns in the U.S.

B.C. man gets prison sentence, fine for using fake names to buy guns in the U.S.
A U.S. District Court judge in Montana has sentenced a 27-year-old man from Kelowna, B.C., to 18 months in prison for using fake names to buy guns with the aim of selling them in Canada. A statement from the United States Attorney's Office in Montana says Haptei John Kozak pleaded guilty earlier this year to four counts of making false statements during a firearms transaction. 

B.C. man gets prison sentence, fine for using fake names to buy guns in the U.S.

Vancouver Island man charged in hit-and-run that killed 17-year-old girl

Vancouver Island man charged in hit-and-run that killed 17-year-old girl
A man from Vancouver Island is facing a criminal charge in connection to a fatal hit-and-run that killed a teenager earlier this year. The North Cowichan-Duncan RCMP says a 28-year-old man from the Cowichan Valley is accused of failing to stop at the scene of an accident causing death.

Vancouver Island man charged in hit-and-run that killed 17-year-old girl

Officers in B.C. make dozens of seizures of methamphetamine bound for Australia

Officers in B.C. make dozens of seizures of methamphetamine bound for Australia
Canadian border officers in British Columbia made 60 seizures of methamphetamine destined for export to Australia between March and August. The Canadian Border Services Agency says the seizures totalled nearly 400 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine and close to 1,300 litres of a liquid form of the drug.

Officers in B.C. make dozens of seizures of methamphetamine bound for Australia

Fire spreads to multiple Vancouver homes

Fire spreads to multiple Vancouver homes
It took several dozen firefighters more than seven hours to put out a fire that spread to multiple homes in East Vancouver last night. Vancouver Fire Chief Karen Fry says the blaze in the Strathcona neighbourhood had quickly spread from one home to four others nearby.

Fire spreads to multiple Vancouver homes