Emergency room in northern Ontario to close Friday due to doctor shortage - Action News
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Emergency room in northern Ontario to close Friday due to doctor shortage

The emergency room in the northern Ontario community of Thessalon will be closed for the second time this year on Friday, Sept. 13.

Locum program that brings physicians to the hospital renewed into March 2025

A grey building with a glass door and a sign next to with a large white H on a blue background
The North Shore Health Network's Thessalon site has not had in-patient hospital services since 2020. (Kate Rutherford/CBC)

The emergency room in the northern Ontario community of Thessalon, east of Sault Ste. Marie,will be closed for the second time this year on Friday, Sept. 13. it's due to a shortage of doctors to staff the facility.

"This is caused because of a lack of physician coverage for the site," said Tim Vine, the president and CEO of the North Shore Health Network, which runs small hospitals in Thessalon, Blind River and Richard's Landing.

Vine says all three hospitals in the network are highly dependent on locums where doctors from other regions travel to rural areas to fill in for a short time.

The Thessalon site has two doctors who work at the Bruce Mines clinic 15 minutes away who support the site on a more permanent basis. There are no primary care practices currently in the community.

Tim Vine is CEO of the North Shore Health Network.
Tim Vine, CEO of the North Shore Health Network says some 60 per cent of physician shifts are backfilled by temporary locum doctors to keep the three hospitals in his region open on the north shore of Lake Huron. (Melanie Kubatlija)

The province runs a temporary locum program, which means Vine and his colleagues don't get much advance notice if they'll receive more funding to hire locums.

Funding for the Temporary Locum Program was due to end on Sept. 30. In a memo sent to small hospital CEOs on Sept. 3, the Ministry of Health announced it would continue funding the program so it could run from Oct. 1. 2024 to March 31, 2025.

The memo said physicians who participate in the program receive premiums and payment for travel expenses.

Vine says he welcomes support from locums, but the longer-term solution for small rural and northern hospitals is for the province to address the overall physician shortage.

"We need to increase the supply of doctors," he said.

"I think there's a fundamental physician supply issue. We also have to make our case rural practice a lot more attractive."

Part of making rural medicine more attractive for doctors, Vine says, is simply paying them more.

But he adds expectations for rural doctors, who end up doing everything, need to change as well.

"We need to create more flexibility in those contracts for people to concentrate rather than do what we call full-service rural generalism," Vine said.

While the emergency room in Thessalon will be closed Friday, it's scheduled to reopen at 8 a.m. on Saturday.People needing emergency services will be re-routed to Blind River, Richard's Landing, or Sault Ste. Marie

With files from Martha Dillman