More Doctors Returning To Canada

Posted on Thursday, August 25 at 10:14 by jensonj
The report by the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), released Wednesday, shows that 317 physicians returned to Canada last year compared to 262 who left. The net surplus is the first since the institute began collecting this data in 1969, and is "a continuation in the trend we have seen since the mid-1990s of a decreasing number of doctors leaving Canada for opportunities in other countries," said Steve Slade, co-author of the report. "That's not happened once on record with our database, and it's a first, a historical year for Canada," he said from Ottawa. The number of doctors who left Canada stood at 420 in 2000; and in 1994, a whopping 771 physicians crossed the border south or left the country's shores. Meanwhile, a 24 per cent rise in the number of doctors returning home in 2004, compared with five years earlier, gave Canada's physician workforce the net gain. Leitch, who attended the University of Toronto's medical school, went to California in 2001 to complete her training in pediatric orthopedic surgery. There were lots of opportunities in the United States, but Leitch said she jumped at an offer from the University of Western Ontario and returned to Canada in late 2002. Since then, she has been named chair chief of pediatric surgery at the Children's Hospital of Western Ontario. "The primary reason I returned to Canada . . . is that the Canadian taxpayers paid for my education," Leitch, 34, said from London. Ont. "There is a huge investment in educating, in particular specialist physicians . . . and it only made sense to me that the people who had made that huge investment should benefit from that specialty they've invested in." Leitch said there are only about 60 orthopedic surgeons for children in Canada, and even one leaving would have a huge impact on patient care. But she doesn't think returning home makes her unique. "I think there are a lot of Canadian physicians who were trained in Canada who've gone to the United States and are looking for a reason to come home. I think it's because we have a better quality of life in Canada, I think they see there are opportunities here that weren't available to them in the United States or elsewhere abroad, and that we are a well-supported community." Dr. Ruth Collins-Nakai, president of the Canadian Medical Association, said the return of some physicians may be related to Canada luring back doctors to head or staff high-profile research institutes at universities across the country. "I guess we're somewhat relieved to see there's a net increase in physicians coming into Canada, although it doesn't really help us in overall numbers," lamented Collins-Nakai. "We are more or less treading water in terms of our overall physician supply." The CIHI report shows that the number of doctors across the country rose by five per cent between 2000 and 2004 - to 60,612 from 57,803. But growth in the country's population kept pace during that period, leaving the number of doctors per 100,000 residents relatively stable - a status quo that has not made it easier for Canadians to find a family physician or get access to a specialist. Collins-Nakai said hundreds more medical school entry positions are needed - and professors to replace those retiring to teach them - if Canada is to even approach self-sufficiency in achieving a physician workforce large enough to serve all Canadians in a timely fashion. "In order to accomplish that, the medical schools, which are currently bursting at their seams, are going to need increased resources," the cardiologist said from Edmonton. Complicating efforts to ramp up the number of doctors to meet an aging population's growing demand for both family practitioners and specialists is the concurrent greying of health-care services. Baldly put, Canada's doctors are getting older. In 2000-2004, the average age of physicians increased by one year, to 49 from 48. During the same period, the proportion of physicians under age 40 dropped by 13 per cent. "That's like our window into the future, where we see a decrease in the number of really quite recent graduates in Canada," said Slade. The report also shows that the doctor supply is made up increasingly by women: in 2004, females accounted for almost one-third of physicians, a 10 per cent increase since 2000. Among doctors 40 and under, women made up nearly half in 2004. But with more female doctors working shorter hours, access to care is not improving for patients, but declining, experts says. Making matters worse for patients is the expected retirement of more than six per cent of physicians in the next two years, said Collins-Nakai. "And we expect up to one-third of all physicians to be decreasing hours of work. "Many physicians over the past half or (full) decade have been doing excessive hours of work to provide access to patients," she said. "And we know we've got increased burnout levels among physicians." http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2005/08/24/pf-1186364.html

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  1. Thu Aug 25, 2005 11:20 pm
    "... Leitch ... returned to Canada in late 2002. Since ... has been named chair chief of pediatric surgery at the Children's Hospital of Western Ontario. ... The primary reason I returned to Canada . . . is that the Canadian taxpayers paid for my education," Leitch, 34, said ... "

    Or maybe she jumped because this was a pretty good opportunity. She may be telling the truth about her motives, but I'm not convinced.

    Notice that the average age of docs keeps getting older. As they age, that means more are retiring or are approaching retirement, which opens up the primo jobs, especially for those that left and got experience in the US.

    I know 2 doctors who went south, one who has returned. His motives were not entirely patriotic (though he did miss many Canadian attributes). He's secured a decent surgical position (funny enough in London as well) and has a private practice as well (don't they all). Money is a great motivator, and as the high paying jobs open due to retirement and an aging population, we should continue to see this trend continue. I would be curious to see how many GP's came home to roost. We have a definitive shortage there (which is not measured in the straight up doc/patient ratio) but that pay scale has not kept pace with the US. Until it does, that shortage should continue.

  2. Fri Aug 26, 2005 2:46 am
    262 left, 317 returned - these are piddling little numbers, yet our system is so strained it makes a big difference. That's a very sad commentary on the state of health care in a 'first world' country.

  3. Mon Aug 29, 2005 2:07 am
    Yes it is. What I don't understand is why nobody is stating the obvious source of the problem.

    Governments across Canada cut medical school funding and student seats many years ago and they have never been restored. Lets see, not enough seats available to train enough doctors to keep up with demand = not enough doctors. Am I some sort of Einstien to have figured that out?

    The liberalconservativereform party and the mainstream media pretty well ignore this inconvenient little fact. It was just another tactic to manufacture a "healthcare crisis" which the private sector will "rescue" us from - along with a huge amount of money.

  4. Mon Aug 29, 2005 9:23 pm
    Exactly.



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