Skip to content
Click on cover to enlarge
Illustration by Garrett Van Winkle

June 2006

«  page 2 of 9  »

Illustration by Garrett Van Winkle

Published in the June 2006 issue.  » BUY ISSUE     

Bookmark and Share             Facebook         Stumble      Get The Walrus on your Blackberry or Windows Mobile        RSS



I am finishing my last year of medical school at the University of Toronto and plan to practise rural family medicine. Canada is in desperate need of rural and family physicians. Only 10.3 percent of Canada’s doctors work in rural or remote areas, caring for up to a third of the population. Health Canada’s Ministerial Advisory Council on Rural Health recently stated that “there is a fundamental mismatch between the health care needs of people living in rural Canada and the availability of health care providers and health services.” At last count, Canada was short 1,175 rural doctors.

Research shows that growing up in a rural area and entering medical school with plans to become a family physician are the most important predictors of a doctor practising in a rural area. However, data published in 2002 revealed that students of rural origin are seriously under-represented in Canadian medical schools. Currently only 11 percent of Canadian medical students come from rural backgrounds—one-third as many as would be predicted by demographics.

From 1992 to 2003, the number of Canadian medical students choosing family medicine as a career fell from 44 percent to 25 percent, rising slightly, to 28 percent by 2005.

Extensive efforts have been made across Canada to promote training and practice in rural settings. Ontario reimburses medical students up to $1,500 per month for participating in a rural elective. These efforts are important. Due to the relatively small number of students from rural areas in medical school, urban students must be exposed to the rewards of rural medicine. Physicians raised in urban settings account for two-thirds of new physicians in rural areas.

This past February, students from each of Canada’s seventeen medical schools met in Toronto to discuss the state of family medicine in Canada. They established a Family Medicine Interest Group at each of their respective schools, with the goal of increasing the number of Canadian medical students choosing family medicine. Similarly, another group of Canadian medical students are creating a National Rural Medicine Student Committee and held their first meeting this April at the Society of Rural Physicians of Canada’s annual conference. The University of Toronto has both an Interest Group in Family Medicine and a Rural Health Initiative, and has delegates on both national committees.

While these efforts are encouraging, what is really needed is further primary care reform in order to compensate family physicians and rural physicians adequately. As long as there is a significant pay discrepancy between specialists and family physicians, the shortage of family physicians in Canada will continue.

Canadians deserve access to family physicians. We must continue to encourage federal and provincial governments as well as Health Canada policy-makers to address this fundamental issue.

Jonathan Kerr
Toronto, Ontario


I commend Alastair Brown for discussing the realities of family practice in rural communities, specifically Kinmount, Ontario. As a recently retired physician from neighbouring Minden Hills, I can vouch for the difficulties one meets in such a practice. Patients are often elderly and poor. Communities tend to lack public transportation, which would make follow-up visits easier and more affordable—patients commonly suffer from multiple chronic illnesses. Dr. Mihu and her colleagues nevertheless carry on with great skill and empathy under these conditions.

Comments

Comment on this article


Will not be displayed on the site

Submit a comment online

Submit a letter to the Editor


    Cancel

The Walrus E-Newsletter

Online exclusives, events, offers:
get news of everything Walrus.


Article Tools

»    RSS Feed      Bookmark and Share

»  Printer-friendly page

»  Email this article

»  Comment on this article

»  More in this issue

»  More in Letters

»  BUY THIS ISSUE

ADVERTISE WITH US